The Real Enron Scandal
Charles R. Smith
Monday, Jan. 28, 2002
Documents Link Enron's Fall to Clinton 'Corruption'
In 1992, Enron was one of the most popular contributors to Bill
Clinton and the DNC. Enron was right next to Bill Clinton from
his first days in the White House. In 1992, Enron donated
$100,000 to Clinton's inauguration, and Enron's top exec, Ken Lay,
stayed at the White House 11 times.
If the FBI, GAO or Congress wants to investigate billions of
dollars lost to "corruption, collusion and nepotism," they need
look no further than Bill Clinton.
Enron executives traveled with Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown
in 1994 on trade missions to Russia, India, Indonesia and China,
cutting U.S. taxpayer-financed deals in each country. In fact,
Brown paid a great deal of attention to Enron. Indonesia
was pressed by Clinton's secretary of commerce to accept Enron
deals laced with corruption.
Enron's most twisted activities involve a 1994 trade trip to
Indonesia with then-Commerce Secretary Brown. Immediately
after traveling to Indonesia, Brown personally sought
approval for Enron electric power plants sponsored by U.S.
funding. The documents show that the Clinton administration
knew the deals were also filled with kickbacks for Indonesian
president Suharto.
According to a personal letter directed to the Indonesian
minister for trade and industry, Brown assisted Enron by
endorsing deals with the corrupt Suharto regime for two gas-fired power plants.
According to Enron, the natural gas for the project was to be
provided through Pertamina, Indonesia's state-owned oil and gas
company. Pertamina, however, stalled the project with excessive
demands for higher gas prices.
"Enron power, a world-renowned private power developer, is in
the final stages of negotiating two combined cycle, gas turbine
power projects," wrote Brown in his 1995 letter.
"The first, a 500 MW plant in East Java, should begin commercial
power generation by the end of 1997 if it can promptly negotiate
a gas supply Memorandum of Understanding with Pertamina. The
other project, a smaller plant in East Kalimantan, also awaits a
gas supply agreement.
"I urge you to give full consideration to the proposals,"
concluded Brown to the Indonesian minister.
Clinton State Department Support for Enron
In addition, the Clinton administration enlisted the State
Department to strong-arm the Indonesians to accept the power
plant deal. In a March 1995 memo from the American Embassy in
Jakarta, U.S. officials pressed the Indonesians to conclude the
contracts for Enron.
"Enron Corp. continues to negotiate with the relevant
authorities regarding availability and price of gas supply,"
states the Embassy memo. "Embassy continues to raise the issue
of deregulation of the gas supply system with Pertamina."
In October 1995, Brown wrote Hartarto Sastrosurarto, Indonesia's
coordinating minister for trade and industry, urging him to
conclude the Enron power plant deal.
"I would like to bring to your attention a number of projects
involving American companies which seem to be stalled, including
several independent power projects. These projects include the
Tarahan power project, which involves Southern Electric; the gas
powered projects in East Java and East Kalimantan, which
involves Enron," wrote Brown.
"Your support for prompt resolution of the remaining issues
associated with each of these projects would be most
appreciated," concluded Brown.
Press Ignores Enron Links to Clinton
Perhaps one reason why the mainstream press has not paid much
attention to this critical 1995 letter written by Ron Brown is
the fact that Brown also lobbied hard on behalf of a major
contract for Time-Warner with the corrupt Suharto regime.
On Nov. 18, 1996, Enron finally announced that the deal with
Suharto was complete. According to Enron's public statement,
the U.S.-led energy company had finally won the East Java power
project.
"Enron is extremely pleased to reach this crucial step in this
project," stated Enron chairman and CEO Kenneth L. Lay on the successful conclusion of the Java power deal.
"Enron's strong experience in developing natural gas-fired
plants makes this project ideal for Enron, our partners and our
customer."
All was not as it seemed inside the Indonesian power
industry, however. In fact, U.S. government officials were keenly aware
of the rampant corruption inside Indonesia's electric power
producers and, in particular, the Enron power project.
Documented 'Corruption, Collusion and Nepotism'
In October 1998, U.S. Ambassador J. Stapleton Roy wrote a
diplomatic cable that he had recently met with Indonesian
Director General of Electricity Endro Utomo Notodisoerjo.
According to the cable, the Indonesians were more than honest
about the ongoing criminal activity.
"Commenting on corruption, collusion and nepotism (KKN), Endro
said that in the past there was no separation between 'power'
(not electric but former first family power) and business. 'All
the IPP's have a relation with power, and it is still going on,'
added Endro."
According to State Department documents, Enron was subject to
corruption in the two power plant deals with the Suharto
government. One State Department cable included an entire
section titled "Dealing with Unwanted Partners."
"Unocal executives told resources officer that the firm is close
to reaching a deal with its partner, PT Nusamba (controlled by
former President Soeharto crony Bob Hasan) to sever ties in two
production sharing contracts (PSC) in East Kalimantan and East
Java," noted a State Department cable.
Curiously, many secrets still surround the Enron power plants.
The U.S. State Department maintains that some information on the
Indonesian power deals must remain classified. One partly
blacked out cable from the State Department is titled "on power
projects, corruption, draft laws."
The December 1998 cable, a discussion between U.S. Ambassador
Roy and an individual whose name was withheld, states that the
highly placed individual in the Indonesian government "stressed
that solutions to the problem must be simple to convince 'the
people' that corruption, collusion and nepotism ('KKN') are
being dealt with properly.
"The draft oil and gas law is currently with the State
Secretariat (Sekeng)," states the cable from Ambassador Roy.
"He expects it to be finalized this month and go before the
Indonesian parliament (DPR) in January. He said that those that
are not happy with the new law – including Pertamina, the Army
and some members of the Indonesian parliament (DPR) – have
'vested interests' in the current system."
'First Family Involvement'
According to dozens of documents, the "vested" interest included
bribes and kickbacks allocated to the Suharto family and its
"crony" friends. In fact, the Department of Commerce allocated an
entire category in its documentation called "first family
involvement" to describe the bribes paid to Suharto.
By 1997 the Indonesian power plant deals collapsed due to the
rampant corruption. As a result of the collapse, the U.S.
government had to pay off millions in insurance claims by the
U.S. corporations that lost money.
In 2000, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency of the
World Bank Group, another U.S. taxpayer-financed organization,
noted that it had to pay insurance money to Enron for its
Indonesian power plant failure.
"In June of this year, MIGA paid $15 million to Enron Java Power
Co. for its investment in P.T. East Java Power Corporation in
Indonesia," states the official release from the MIG World Bank.
"The venture was one of many suspended by the presidential
decree of September 20, 1997, issued in response to the
country's economic crisis."
Robert Rubin and Enron
There are several direct connections between Enron and Bill
Clinton. A major part of U.S. taxpayer financing for Enron's
Indonesian projects was obtained through the Export-Import bank
(EXIM).
Several of the Indonesian projects listed in Commerce documents
note that EXIM head Ken Brody worked closely with Commerce
Secretary Brown on the U.S. government financing. The EXIM bank
under Brody financed over $4 billion worth of gas deals
for Enron.
Ken Brody is also a close friend of Clinton Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin. Rubin worked with Brody during his years at the
investment firm Goldman Sachs. Enron is listed as one of
44 such companies with which Rubin had "significant
contact" during his years at Goldman Sachs.
Contributions for Favors
Despite the GAO requests for Bush documents, there are plenty of
questions that need to be answered about the Clinton years. A
study by the Center for Public Integrity shows that 187
companies participated in 14 Clinton-sponsored trade missions.
Of those, 67 are known to have contributed money to the
Democrats.
Between 1993 and 1994, 26 companies received support from the
Overseas Private Investment Corp. and the Export-Import Bank
totaling about $5 billion. According to the center's study,
five corporations – Enron, U.S. West, GTE, McDonnell Douglas and
Fluor – donated $563,000 to the Democrats and received at least
$2.6 billion in contracts.
Moreover, the U.S. government was aware that insuring the false
contracts inside Indonesia could push the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation into bankruptcy.
"OPIC's combined exposure in Indonesia is close to USD 1
billion, or 5 percent of OPIC's global exposure, all in the
electric power sector. As such, resolution of potential
insurance claims and/or actions could result in 'an adverse
material impact' on OPIC finances," notes a cable from the U.S.
ambassador to Indonesia.
Yet, despite being faced with total financial failure due to
huge losses, OPIC continued to back more power deals inside
Indonesia. The Commerce documents note that during the Clinton
years, Indonesian dictator Suharto contracted for 26 U.S. taxpayer-sponsored power projects while his impoverished nation could afford only one such plant.
More Cash for Enron
Still, Enron did not limit its activities to the Export-Import
Bank or OPIC. Enron also profited from the Clinton Department
of Transportation through a corrupt Maritime finance program.
Two power barges for export to Indonesia made by Enron Corp.
were built through the DOT Maritime-funding program and backed
by $50 million in taxpayer financing.
During the Clinton years the same taxpayer-sponsored Maritime
program also tried to finance two dual-use cargo ships for the
Chinese navy. The financing fell through only after it was
revealed that the Chinese navy could also use the ships as part
of an invasion armada pointed at Taiwan.
However, the Department of Transportation Maritime financing did
manage to lend over $60 million to build a paddle-wheel steam
boat/casino. Still another DOT Maritime deal landed millions in
taxpayer-supported loans for two floating combination
hotel-casino barges.
Trade Trips for DNC Donations
In August 1994, Brown led a trade mission to China and Hong Kong
that included Enron. The mission also included major million-dollar DNC donors such as Loral CEO Bernard Schwartz and
investment banker Sanford Robertson. Robertson admitted to the
New York Post that he was invited solely because he supported
Clinton with campaign money.
The telltale Post article was discovered in the files of Ron
Brown along with a tight list of exclusive DNC donors. Another
document that Ron Brown kept in his personal files listed Enron,
Edison Mission Energy, California Energy, Hughes, AT&T, Federal
Express, Sprint and Chrysler as donating money to the DNC.
The direct donation of money in exchange for favors is clearly
documented. The Indonesian scam took the U.S. taxpayers and
corporate investors for billions of dollars in lost funds.
Company execs and U.S. government officials ignored the
"corruption."
Documented Crime but No Investigation
Documents obtained from the Clinton administration are filled
with direct quotes and hard numbers detailing taxpayer monies
that were paid as illegal bribes to a corrupt regime. The
citizens of Indonesia and the United States were the victims of
a massive crime. That crime has received no press attention and
no investigation.
It may shock and surprise you that the demise of Enron started
long before George W. Bush was elected. Enron's fall was due to
"corruption" that started during the Clinton administration.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Clinton Scandals
Enron