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JP Morgan Buys Tony Blair for One Million Dollars a Year
This morning brings the remarkable news that Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair has gone to work as a part time consultant for the huge JP Morgan investment bank, at a salary estimated at a million dollars a year.
What I find remarkable is not so much the news as the apparent lack of reaction to it.
It’s not just a question of a British leader leaving his nation’s top office for employment in a sprawling company with worldwide interests—everyone does that these days—but the fact that Blair is doing it—while at the same time continuing official duties in a very sensitive and financially key part of the world.
Blair is not being hired by Morgan for his economic skills, which were never impressive. As JP Morgan’s chief executive Jamie Dimon announced frankly, "There are only a handful of people in the world who have the knowledge and relationships that he has."
Such relationships are key to Blair’s current official duties.
Thanks to pressure from his friend George Bush, Blair was handed a very sensitive assignment: Middle East envoy working on behalf of the US, Russia, the UN and the EU.
Though supposedly focused on Palestinian development, Blair’s activities necessarily involve top level contacts with leaders throughout the world, particularly the leaders of the Middle East, leaders flush with trillions of dollars in assets, leaders making enormous deals and investments around the globe--the kind of deals that are Morgan’s bread and butter.
Is it not conceivable there might be a slight conflict of interest, at least a whiff of impropriety, in Blair’s twin roles as peace maker and deal maker?
When Blair’s diplomatic appointment was announced, many in the Middle East and elsewhere questioned the former PM’s ability to act as an honest broker in the region because of his unequivocal support for George Bush in the war in Iraq, and failing to call for a halt to the Israeli bombing of Lebanon last summer. They had a point.
Blair’s million dollar job with J.P Morgan provides skeptics with further ammunition.
Barry Lando, a former 60 Minutes producer, is the author of "Web of Deceit: The History of Western Complicity in Iraq from Churchill to Kennedy to George W. Bush." He also blogs at Barrylando.com.
| Also by Barry Lando | ||||
| U.S. Congress to Iraq: Pay Our War Expenses With Your Oil Revenue Adding insult to injustice, five new pieces of legislation call for Iraqis to pay for the U. S. occupation of their country. April 28, 2008. |
Why Do We Keep Giving Israel a Pass? What causes so many Jews to turn ethically deaf and morally blind when the state of Israel itself is concerned? February 1, 2008. |
Bush Reaches Economic Dead End The prestige of an American President, his ability to reassure jittery investors around the world, has never been lower. January 23, 2008. |
Bush of Arabia: What All the Talk Shows Missed While Bush was suggesting Arabs might lower their oil prices, they were using their profits to pick up a slice of America's most powerful bank. January 17, 2008. |
Bush's Middle East Visit Is a Con Game and We're Supposed to Be the Suckers Bush is promising the Saudis 20 billion dollars in sophisticated weapons—including 121 million dollars worth of precision guided bombs. January 15, 2008. |