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Oil for Food, Money for Kofi
The Weekly Standard ^ | 04/07/03 | Claudia Rosett

Posted on 03/29/2003 9:45:43 AM PST by Pokey78

A bad program that has outlived its usefulness.

IT'S HUGE, OPAQUE, PERVERSE, run by the United Nations, and about the last thing a postwar Iraq will need. But after a short pause, the Oil-for-Food program is with us once again, revived last week at the urging of France, and with the backing of President Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair.

United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan had suspended the program at the start of the war--leaving all concerned to contemplate $2.8 billion in Oil-for-Food funds left in limbo, plus $10.1 billion worth of goods contracted for but stuck in the pipeline. With Saddam deemed no longer viable as a contracting party, the U.N. has just given a somewhat modified Oil-for-Food plan a 45-day lease on life, subject to renewal.

Perhaps it was simplest to press on for a few more weeks with this monstrosity of a program, which in recent years has turned the U.N. into chief comprador for Baghdad, overseeing oil deals on commission for Saddam Hussein. An estimated 60 percent of Iraqis depend on Oil-for-Food rations, and going ahead for a brief spell with a U.N. program now revamped to bypass Saddam might help in rushing relief, already paid for, to hungry Iraqis. It might also have the dubious virtue of helping Tony Blair demonstrate to his more muddled constituents that, yes, he can do business with the U.N. And, at a moment when Bush and Blair are urgently busy fighting a war to free Iraq, temporarily extending Oil-for-Food may have averted the distraction of more hysteria from the Russians and French, whose contractors have been among the top suppliers of Saddam, and whose done deals via the U.N. were in mortal danger of going sour.

For all that, simply scrapping Oil-for-Food would have been the wiser move. This program was crafted by the U.N. in 1995 as a "temporary measure" tied to Saddam, not meant to outlive him. The plan was to continue sanctions against Saddam's regime, while trying to funnel basic necessities--via Saddam's Trade Ministry--to the Iraqi people. That mission has by now turned into one of the most Byzantine, distorted, and massive "relief" efforts ever devised. Oil-for-Food is not a program designed merely to deliver food and medicine, neither is it arranged so as to promote the development of a healthy society. It is, in practice, a scaffold for dictatorship, erected and maintained by U.N. bureaucracy. The only revamping thorough enough to fix these drawbacks will require tearing the whole thing down and starting fresh--with the U.N. playing a peripheral role, if any at all.

The unique twist of Oil-for-Food, the feature that makes it supreme among the world's lousiest aid schemes, is that it depends for all its funding, including its administrative budget, on the revenues of Iraq's state oil monopoly. So the U.N. is bankrolled by the very government it is supposed to be monitoring. And, having supplied all the money, the government of Iraq gets to draw up a shopping list, and propose, subject to an okay from the U.N., who among its citizens will get what. Never mind that Iraq's problem has been the lack of liberty, stifling of private enterprise, and gross misappropriation of resources by Saddam. The U.N. has for years been content to serve in Iraq chiefly as conduit and trustee for Saddam's selling, buying, and distributing.

The sums of money involved are enormous, both for Saddam and the U.N. Iraq is home to the world's second-largest oil reserves after Saudi Arabia, and despite the degradation of its petroleum industry under Saddam, there's been enough production to make Oil-for-Food the U.N.'s single largest program in terms of Kofi Annan's say-so over cash flow.

Since the program began operating, in December 1996, the U.N. has shepherded about $64 billion in Iraqi oil sales, and more than $39 billion in relief purchases, plus billions more for projects such as compensation to foreign victims of the first Gulf War. To cover its administrative costs, the U.N. collects a 2.2 percent commission on Iraqi oil sales, a setup that over the course of the program has generated more than $1 billion for U.N. coffers.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the U.N. has greatly expanded the Oil-for-Food program, in 1998 raising an initial ceiling on Saddam's oil sales, and in 1999 removing it entirely. With higher revenues (until interrupted by the war), the scope of imports has also expanded, subject to a distribution plan inside Iraq that the U.N. explains is "prepared by the Government of Iraq and approved by the Secretary-General."

Along with the usual meals and medicine, Oil-for Food last year introduced such items--approved by Annan this past December--as $4 million for air conditioners, phones, and vehicles to support the workings of Saddam's so-called Ministry of Justice. Annan also signed off on $50 million to supply Baghdad's totalitarian Ministry of Information "with television and radio studio systems, mobile broadcasting vehicles, television, and radio transmission equipment"--all for the use of the same Saddam propaganda machine that coalition troops have been risking their lives to knock off the air.

Another intriguing item approved by Annan last December was $20 million earmarked for "a project of Olympic sport city," complete with a sports hotel and $10 million worth of "sports supplies and materials." It bears noting, though the U.N. report does not do so, that the person infamously in charge of Olympic sports in Iraq has been Saddam's son Uday, long known for his sadistic ways. According to a gruesome report in Sports Illustrated, Uday has tortured athletes who disappoint him with beatings and amputations.

Inside Iraq, the U.N. has had nine of its alphabet-soup agencies implementing the Oil-for-Food program, employing in recent times some 900 expatriates and 3,000 locals. Their job has been to ensure that distribution takes place in keeping with the plan drawn up by Saddam and approved by Annan. In other words, the U.N. has basically been in the business of shoring up a prime source of Saddam's control--his command-economy state dole.

One might argue that with Saddam removed from the helm, Oil-for-Food will revert to a more benign aid arrangement. In Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq--where Saddam has been required by U.N. rules to hand over 13 percent of his oil proceeds, but, thanks to U.S. and British overflights, has had no real jurisdiction these past 12 years--local folks have fared much better than in the rest of Iraq. And tapping into Iraq's state monopoly oil income to help rebuild the country is a plan that leaders of the coalition now fighting for free Iraq have also been considering.

But even for the allies, maintaining a central oil monopoly to fund a vast public dole would be a risky tactic--more likely to perpetuate a command economy, primed for the next dictatorship, than to foster a free society. The only real solution is, somehow, to privatize Iraq's oil riches, cutting the state out of the loop. That will need creative thinking and deep devotion to democratic principles. For anything even approaching such a project, the U.N. Oil-for-Food program is spectacularly ill-suited--with its sorry history and large vested interest in whatever it can retrieve of the Saddam setup.

Beyond that, if you like Enron-style transparency, you have to love Oil-for-Food. At any given time, the program oversees billions in Iraq's money, awaiting the sludge-slow U.N. process of allocation and disbursement. For the first few years the U.N. parked the cash in a French bank, the Banque Nationale de Paris. More recently, it diversified the funds--currently totaling some $13 billion--among a handful of banks. But the U.N. provides no bank statements to the public, does not disclose the names of the banks, and won't even say what countries they're based in. Auditing is an in-house affair, conducted by government employees of a rotating trio of member states, chaired this year by France.

Is this what American and British troops are now giving their lives to clear the way for? How about some genuine relief? When Annan's Oil-for-U.N.-Jobs program comes up for renewal in May, let's pull the plug.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: oilforfood

1 posted on 03/29/2003 9:45:43 AM PST by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
The "oil-for-food" UN program is the heart of the UN's problem with the war. It's all about money. That's all.
2 posted on 03/29/2003 9:47:30 AM PST by isthisnickcool (This space for rent?)
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To: Pokey78
PULL THE PLUG on the UN!
3 posted on 03/29/2003 9:49:24 AM PST by snopercod
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To: Pokey78
The resumption of this scam is nothing more than france's attempt to resume their sweet oil deal and get their foot in the reconstruction door.
4 posted on 03/29/2003 9:59:32 AM PST by fat city
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To: Pokey78
Wow! That explains a lot.
5 posted on 03/29/2003 10:05:43 AM PST by NewYorker
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To: Pokey78
The Un is like any special interest group they convince themselves that their actions stem from their ideals but the truth is...it is all about money. Once they're addicted to the money their cause becomes even more important because it has become their livelihood.
6 posted on 03/29/2003 10:30:01 AM PST by tiki
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To: Pokey78
Fox just reported that Iraq will NOT accept the "Oil for Food" program.
7 posted on 03/29/2003 10:54:20 AM PST by COUNTrecount (I went to the Electoral College , where did Moore go ?)
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To: Pokey78
For the first few years the U.N. parked the cash in a French bank, the Banque Nationale de Paris. More recently, it diversified the funds--currently totaling some $13 billion--among a handful of banks. But the U.N. provides no bank statements to the public, does not disclose the names of the banks, and won't even say what countries they're based in. Auditing is an in-house affair, conducted by government employees of a rotating trio of member states, chaired this year by France.

How many millions of dollars are lining the pockets of corrupt UN officials and what cut do the banks and the auditors get of the top to keep it quiet? Iraq has been a source of easy money for the UN, France, Germany, Russia... Look for the corruption to continue if the UN has its hands in the reconstruction of Iraq.

8 posted on 03/29/2003 11:49:01 AM PST by eggman
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To: Pokey78
When Annan's Oil-for-U.N.-Jobs program comes up for renewal in May, let's pull the plug.
Sixty percent of Iraqis get their food from this program.

GWB says that the oil "belongs to the Iraqi people." The sovereign way to back that up is for us to secure and operate the oil system, buy the oil at market prices, and distribute cash royalties directly into checking accounts for each adult Iraqi. Then the money will go, not to poison gas, but to food, housing, electricity, air conditioners, automobiles, and refrigerators as actually needed by the people themselves.

Institute that system and keep it going for a couple of years--then just let the new Iraqi government try to dismantle it! It'll be the "third rail of Iraqi politics" exactly like Social Security has been here.


9 posted on 03/29/2003 3:40:25 PM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: Pokey78
Bump. See also:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/884579/posts?page=1
10 posted on 04/04/2003 4:59:56 AM PST by PogySailor
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To: Pokey78
The corruption involved in this scam is monumental. It will all be revealed in Iraq's documents. Kofi should be toast.
11 posted on 04/04/2003 5:11:46 AM PST by ValerieUSA
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To: Pokey78
The problems is that Bush is reluctant to SEEM illiberal about the UN. He and Powell want to introduce a little UN eyewash, which makes it appear that we are cooperating with them without actually doing so. The problem with that is that the UN is like the proverbial tar baby. Touch it and it sticks to you. I wish he would just bite the bullet and tell Chirac and Kofi to go take a hike.
12 posted on 04/17/2003 6:32:38 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: isthisnickcool
Gee and we all thought that the sanctions against Iraq was starving 50,000 children per month?? Mr Coffee, No Blood No Oil!!!

Pray for GW and Our Troops

13 posted on 04/17/2003 6:40:26 AM PDT by bray (Old Glory Means Freedom)
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To: Pokey78
Bump for more info later.
14 posted on 04/22/2003 5:03:28 PM PDT by Budge (God Bless FReepers!)
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To: bray
Rush went to town on this subject today. Quite an eye opener! UN corruption is blatant and there is no accountability for billions. I hope other media outlets start harpinng about this.
15 posted on 04/22/2003 5:06:40 PM PDT by demkicker (I wanna kick some commie butt)
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To: Pokey78
Oil for money and your Koffi Chicks for free, I don't want my M-TV.
16 posted on 04/22/2003 5:09:54 PM PDT by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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