Congress: Oil-for-Food Scandal Far Worse Than Earlier Thought
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Monday, Nov. 15, 2004
WASHINGTON Saddam Hussein's regime made more than $21.3
billion in illegal revenue by subverting the U.N.'s oil-for-food
program, more than double previous estimates, according to
congressional investigators.
"This is like an onion: We just keep uncovering more layers
and more layers," said Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., whose Senate
Committee on Government Affairs received the new information at
hearing Monday.
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The new figures on Iraq's alleged surcharges, kickbacks and
oil-smuggling are based on troves of new documents obtained by the
committee's investigative panel, Coleman told reporters before the
hearing. The documents illustrate how Iraqi officials, foreign
companies and sometimes politicians allegedly contrived to allow
the Iraqi government vast illicit gains.
The findings also reflect a growing understanding by
investigators of the intricate schemes Saddam used to buy support
abroad for a move to lift U.N. sanctions.
Coleman said the probe was just beginning and that officials aim
to discover "how this massive fraud was able to thrive for so
long." He said he was angry that the United Nations has not
provided documents and access to officials that investigators need
to move ahead.
"Saddam Hussein attempted to manipulate the typical oil
allocation process in order to gain influence throughout the
world," Mark L. Greenblatt, a counsel for the Senate panel's
permanent subcommittee on investigations, said in prepared
testimony obtained by The Associated Press.
"Rather than giving allocations to traditional oil purchasers,
Hussein gave oil allocations to foreign officials, journalists, and
even terrorist entities, who then sold their allocations to the
traditional oil companies in return for a sizable commission."
The reference to terrorist groups referred to evidence that the
regime had allocated oil to such organizations as Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine, and the Mujahadeen Khalq, a group
seeking to overturn the government of Iran, Greenblatt said.
Previous estimates - one from the General Accountability Office
and the other by the top U.S. arms inspector Charles Duelfer -
concluded that Saddam's government brought in $10 billion illicitly
from 1990 to 2003, when sanctions were in place.
But congressional investigators found that vastly more oil,
totaling $13.7 billion, was smuggled out of Iraq than previously
thought. Investigators also raised the GAO's estimate of $4.4
billion in oil-for-food kickbacks by $200 million, and said the
regime made $2.1 billion more through a scheme where foreign
companies imported flawed goods at inflated prices.
According to the documents, the Iraqi government signed deals to
import rotting food and other damaged goods with the full
understanding of the exporting companies, who accepted payments for
top-quality products while kicking back much of the price
difference to the Iraqi regime.
The panel estimated that such substandard goods accounted for 5
percent of all goods imported under the oil-for-food program, which
was put in place in 1996 amid concerns that the Iraqi population
was suffering from lack of food and medicines under the sanctions.
The rough estimate "is drawn from anecdotal information provide by
officials of the former Iraq regime, the United Nations, and U.S.
government officials," the panel said.
The total estimate of illegal revenue also includes $400 million
from interest earned from hiding illicit funds in secret bank
accounts. Another $400 million in illicit revenue grew out of
pricing irregularities and kickbacks in the Kurdish areas of
northern Iraq.
The Senate panel is conducting one of several congressional
probes into alleged illegal profiteering in the oil-for-food
program after allegations of corruption came to light earlier this
year when Saddam was driven from power during the U.S.-led
invasion. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker heads a
panel that's conducting an independent investigation.
France, Russia, China
The new documents offer examples of how Saddam's regime,
sometimes the former Iraqi president himself, awarded lucrative
oil allocations to garner political favors.
In one document, Russian ultra-nationalist politician Vladimir
Zhirinovsky, who campaigned for the lifting of sanctions on Iraq,
invites an oil company to negotiate a price for an oil allocation
the Iraqi government awarded him.
Zhirinovsky and other foreign officials and political figures
implicated in the scandal so far - mostly from Russia, France and
China - deny any wrongdoing.
In Zhirinovsky's case, the Russian allegedly used his political
party's letterhead to invite an international oil company to Moscow
to negotiate a deal to buy oil allocated to him.
The Iraqi government allocated 80 million barrels of oil to
Zhirinovsky and his party, according to the panel, at a time when
the Russian politician was backing Baghdad publicly.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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