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Documents Prove U.N. Oil Corruption
Insight ^ | April 13, 2004 | Kenneth R. Timmerman

Posted on 04/13/2004 5:26:33 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

A team of international forensic investigators is preparing to blow the lid off the much-disputed U.N. oil-for-food program in Iraq and will present new evidence of corruption at an upcoming congressional hearing that directly will implicate world leaders and top U.N. officials, Insight has learned.

Investigators, led by Claude Hankes-Drielsma and the KPMG accounting firm, currently are in Baghdad sifting through mountains of Saddam Hussein-era records seized from his Oil Ministry and the State Oil Marketing Organization that detail payments by Saddam to his legions of foreign friends and political supporters. An Iraqi newspaper, Al-Mada, published the list of 270 recipients of special "allocations" (also known as vouchers) in January. But as Insight goes to press, the testimony of Hankes-Drielsma on April 22 before the House International Relations Committee is expected to provide new evidence of widespread international corruption.

In a scathing letter sent to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on March 3, which he made available to Insight, Hankes-Drielsma called the U.N. program "one of the world's most disgraceful scams," and said that "based on the facts as I know them at the present time, the U.N. failed in its responsibility to the Iraqi people and the international community at large."

In an earlier letter to Annan, to which he received no reply, Hankes-Drielsma noted that allocations of "very significant supplies of crude oil [were] made to ... individuals with political influence in many countries, including France and Jordan," both of which supported Saddam and his regime to the bitter end.

Under the U.N. program, the Dutch company Saybolt International BV was paid hefty fees to inspect oil tankers loading Iraqi crude in Basra, to make sure no cheating took place. "Now it turns out that the inspecting company was paid off," one investigator said, "while on the ground, individual inspectors were getting cash bribes." Saybolt denies it received an oil allocation, although the Iraqi documents show it was down for 3 million barrels.

Saybolt spokesman Peter Box tells Insight that the company's own investigation of two known incidents of "topping off" involving the oil tanker Essex in 2001 "found no involvement of our staff at that particular time." Saybolt continues to operate in Iraq today, although it now has an "entirely new group of people," Box adds.

Among the revelations at the April 22 hearings, Insight has learned from investigators directly working on the case, will be new details of oil vouchers allegedly granted to Patrick Maugein, a prominent crony of French President Jacques Chirac, said to total 72.2 million barrels.

Maugein's involvement in the U.N.-approved oil deals is significant, investigators say, because he is believed to be a conduit for backdoor payments to Chirac and his family. It was Chirac who spearheaded a worldwide coalition last year that opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and tried desperately to keep Saddam in power.

When the allegations of backdoor payments first surfaced in a Paris courtroom in 1998, Maugein swept them aside as "pure fantasy." And in a statement provided to Insight, he denies having raised funds for Chirac, his family or his political campaigns. But as more evidence begins to leak from the archives of Saddam's former oil ministry, such denials may become harder to sustain.

The vouchers were assigned to two trading companies, identified in the Iraqi documents as Trafigura and Ibex, both of which were involved in the Essex incident. Investigators say they believe both companies are tied to Maugein, either through beneficial ownership or contractual arrangement. Vouchers for an additional 11 million barrels were granted to Maugein business partner Cabecadas Rul de Soussa, according to the original Al-Mada list. The ties between de Soussa and Maugein were first revealed by Therese Raphael of the Wall Street Journal Europe.

Asked about the allegations by Insight, Maugein denied he was involved with either company, although he did acknowledge knowing their principals, with whom he had worked as an oil trader with Marc Rich in Switzerland. He insisted that all his dealings with Iraq were legal and conducted through the oil-for-food program. "Patrick Maugein bought oil for his refinery in Mantua, Italy," a spokesman said. "All the oil deals were run by the U.N. They were paid through the U.N. and monitored by the U.N."

But those denials might not withstand the onslaught of the documents about to be released, investigators say. "Already we've got details of all the accounts held in the names of individuals," one investigator tells Insight in an exclusive interview. "On these records are exact details of which accounts were held by whom," including the foreign proxies and their ultimate beneficiaries - in Iraq and overseas.

The Iraqi documents specifically tie Maugein to the 25 million barrels allocated to Trafigura Beheer BV, a company Maugein claims was a competitor of his own London-based SOCO International. Investigators say other information they have developed shows that Maugein could be a "beneficial owner" of Ibex Energy, a holding company registered in Bermuda that was awarded vouchers for 47.2 million barrels. "That is a very high allocation," an investigator tells this magazine. "If a Cabinet minister gets 12 million barrels, why would Ibex get 47 million barrels unless something much bigger was at stake?"

Other French recipients named in the Iraqi documents include former Interior minister Charles Pasqua (12 million barrels), former French U.N. ambassador Jean-Bernard Merimee (8 million barrels) and Lebanese-French middleman Elias Firzli (14.6 million barrels).

Firzli acknowledged in a lengthy interview with Insight in Paris that the Iraqis were desperate to meet with Chirac and were willing to pay a high price for access. Shortly before the war broke out in March 2003, Firzli says he introduced Iraqi diplomat Nizar Hamdoon - sent as an emissary from Saddam - to senior French government officials in Paris. But Firzli scoffed at the oil vouchers, calling them "small stuff compared to the billions of dollars people made in the 1980s."

Published reports to date have focused on oil vouchers granted to the head of the United Nation's oil-for-food program, Benan Sevan, who has been on an extended vacation since the allegations first surfaced at the end of January. He denied the charges through a U.N. spokesman. And Insight has learned that as investigators pursue the document trail, they believe they are getting closer to world leaders, including Chirac.

But can it be proved? "The Iraqi civil service, even under Saddam, was quite excellent. They kept meticulous records. Every order was cross-referenced, initialed and counterinitialed, so nobody could be accused of taking anything for himself," an investigator who recently returned from Baghdad tells Insight.

Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.), chairman of the House International Relations Committee, sent a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Annan on April 1, which committee staffers tell this magazine was intended to "lay down a marker." It called the scandal "without precedent in U.N. history" and urged Annan to make his response "equally unprecedented." Annan has announced that he will name an independent panel to investigate.

Fears of a U.N. whitewash run high on Capitol Hill. Hyde urged Annan to take steps to ensure that all documents relating to the oil-for-food program "be preserved and secured," and asked that special measures be taken to protect potential whistle-blowers who could provide testimony on the illicit deals. The United States General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, told Hyde's committee recently that $10.1 billion of the estimated $60 billion handled by the United Nations under the program was paid in kickbacks, bribes and set-asides to Saddam and his cronies.

The KPMG forensic-accounting investigators were brought to Baghdad by the Iraqi Governing Council to get to the bottom of the scandal. But Insight has learned that the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), led by J. Paul Bremer, recently took over the investigation, just as the accountants were stumbling over evidence of corruption by Americans working for the CPA. "We were hearing stories of contractors passing envelopes with huge amounts of cash to CPA officials," an investigator says. "As much as $300,000 in cash passed hands."

Speaking from Baghdad, an Iraqi official confirmed to this magazine that the CPA was now in charge of these matters, although the Iraqi Governing Council was footing the bill. "We no longer have control over the documents or the investigation," the official said.

In Washington, the State Department's Bureau of International Organizations is in charge of relations with the United Nations. In preparation for the April 22 hearing, Chairman Hyde has sent two letters to Assistant Secretary of State Kim Holmes requesting that State provide full documentation of the oil-for-food program, including commercial contracts. Since the United States is a permanent member of the Security Council and a leading member of the U.N. Sanctions Committee, State has access to the full United Nations record but has been unwilling to make incriminating information public until now for fear of angering U.S. allies. France accounted for approximately 25 percent of all U.N.-approved trade with Iraq, according to an estimate by the CIA.

"Give France a break," says French ambassador to the United States Jean-David Levitte, writing in the Los Angeles Times. He said allegations that France condoned kickbacks or took bribes "are completely false and can only have been an effort to discredit France, a longtime friend and ally of the U.S."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: glencore; kojoannan; marcrich; oilforfood; patrickmaugein; un
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To: Just mythoughts
"Personally, I do not seem him making it til November. "IF" these Dims think they have a chance of winning this election I believe there will be another candidate on the ballot."

LOL I'm not sure I can make it to Nov. this stuff is crazy!
Anyway, who do you think would take his place?
41 posted on 04/13/2004 8:11:22 PM PDT by GottaLuvAkitas1 (Let's turn Iraqi sand into some useful glass!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
I remember how the lefties criticized the military for surrounding and protecting the oil ministry but not the antiquities museum. Maybe, they were upset that there undercover -frenchie and Deutch - guys couldn't get in there and destroy all these records?
42 posted on 04/13/2004 8:13:32 PM PDT by FreeAtlanta (never surrender, this is for the kids)
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To: GottaLuvAkitas1
"IF" it is believed that the Dims can win then I see Hillary on the ticket.

These dims have a long way to go though to believe they can win.
43 posted on 04/13/2004 8:16:08 PM PDT by Just mythoughts
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Another good story for my U.N. file. When you accumulate news stories about the U.N. over a period of several years you begin to understand just how worthless the U.N. is as an organization!
44 posted on 04/13/2004 8:20:23 PM PDT by Destructor
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To: kcvl
There are two other opportunities for theft and fraud not considered here. The first fraud is to divert some inventory from the authorized Program stock ready for sale and smuggle it to corrupt neighbor states. Pump 10 barrels, smuggle three to Syria and 7 to the Program for sale.

The second scam is that after the oil was sold, and the proceeds available for "Food and Humanitarian Investment" ... the Program empowered SADDAM to choose the products, suppliers, pricing, delivery verification and distribution to Iraqis of the "purchased" products. That's another money laundering and kickback Nirvana. He held all the power over $billion purchasing authority. It would be interesting to see how a $725,000 purchase order to France for 250,000 loaves of "Rye Bread" evolved into a $500,000 cash in advance delivery from Russia via North Korea of 2500 "Rocket Propelled Granades".

Well, at least we can trust the International Atomic Energy Agency to watch the Russian deployment of Iran's new Nuclear Reactor like a hawk. DOH! No chance of payoffs and bribes there.

45 posted on 04/13/2004 8:31:10 PM PDT by Barlowmaker
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To: Tailgunner Joe
" It was Chirac who spearheaded a worldwide coalition last year that opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and tried desperately to keep Saddam in power. "

No War: for Oil.

46 posted on 04/13/2004 8:37:21 PM PDT by cookcounty (Johnson sent him. Nixon expressed him home. And Kerry's too dumb to tell them apart!)
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I remember a year ago, Limbaugh predicting this UN corruption thing would unfold just as it has.

Problem is, how do you get Blather, Jennings & Brokaw to tell the sheep?
47 posted on 04/13/2004 9:16:53 PM PDT by Zman516 (No retreat, baby, no surrender.)
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To: kcvl
which goes into markets the majors tend to skip -- Mongolia, Vietnam, North Korea, Libya and Yemen.

Where's my list of the most corrupt countries in the world? Let's see...

Vietnam ... check.
Lybia ... check.
North Korea ... double check.
Mongolia ... don't know
Yemen ... check.

This guy and Mr Rich certainly have a special set of "friends", don't they?

48 posted on 04/13/2004 9:34:17 PM PDT by texas booster (Make a resolution to better yourself and your community in '04 - vote Republican!)
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To: All
Other reports say celebrities who visited Iraq also got oil vouchers. These included politicians, entertainment and media folks. Who do we know visited Iraq? Jim McDermott, David Bonier and Mike Thompson as well as Sean Penn.

According to those other reports the vouchers were for relatively small amounts handed out as "thank you gifts." Oil traders knowing that celebrities were in town and likely staying at a popular hotel flocked to the hotel to bid on and collect the vouchers.

The oil traders then collected the oil against the vouchers from, according to one report, "the Kirkuk-Banias (Syria) pipeline terminal, which was operating in contravention of the Security Council sanctions. The pipeline carried 200,000 barrels per day of Iraqi oil, which benefited Syria greatly."

49 posted on 04/13/2004 9:35:15 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (Benedict Arnold was a hero for both sides in the same war, too!)
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To: Barlowmaker
There is also the supressed fact that Saddam gifted other Arabic "friends" with billions of dollars worth of oil. This oil was piped and shipped to Syria, Jordan, Egypt and even Algeria at a small fraction of market value in order to buy favor and political support. This smuggled oil if sold at anyway near market value would have easily financed food and medicine for several millions of people.

All of this was reported on C Span but not on the major media.

50 posted on 04/13/2004 10:25:21 PM PDT by Diogenez
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To: Destructor
Another good story for my U.N. file. When you accumulate news stories about the U.N. over a period of several years you begin to understand just how worthless the U.N. is as an organization!

The same organization that Kerry wants to turn Iraq over to. Kerry is toast when this breaks nationally, and the Texas Hold'em poker player from Crawford, goes "all in" and turns up his hole cards.

51 posted on 04/13/2004 10:29:09 PM PDT by Go Gordon
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To: Go Gordon
BUMP THIS ALL DAY
52 posted on 04/13/2004 11:06:55 PM PDT by Walkingfeather
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To: Tailgunner Joe
This sounds juicy, Chiraq is going down.
53 posted on 04/14/2004 12:31:58 AM PDT by John Lenin (Imagine there's no Liberals, It's easy if you try ...)
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To: All
-"No Blood for Oil"- Kojo & Kofi: Unbelievable U.N. stories--
54 posted on 04/14/2004 2:00:44 AM PDT by backhoe (The 1990's? The Decade of Fraud(s)... the 00's? The Decade of Lunatics...)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Asked about the allegations by Insight, Maugein denied he was involved with either company, although he did acknowledge knowing their principals, with whom he had worked as an oil trader with Marc Rich in Switzerland.

The link to the clinton legacy finally surface. Oh... pardon me!

55 posted on 04/14/2004 3:05:44 AM PDT by Preachin'
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To: Tailgunner Joe
BTTT
56 posted on 04/14/2004 3:08:19 AM PDT by spodefly (I've decided not to include a tagline with this post.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
BTTT
57 posted on 04/14/2004 3:31:29 AM PDT by Cap Huff
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To: Shermy
MASTER LIST OIL FOR FOOD SCANDAL
58 posted on 04/14/2004 4:05:01 AM PDT by GailA (Kerry I'm for the death penalty for terrorist, but I'll declare a moratorium on the death penalty)
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To: stylin_geek
OK, since when did we became an enemy, then ?
59 posted on 04/14/2004 5:07:53 AM PDT by Atlantic Friend (Cursum Perficio)
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To: Diogenez
You think that this may have an impact on the Draft Hillary movement?
60 posted on 04/14/2004 5:18:32 AM PDT by EQAndyBuzz
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