WORLD  
comments_image -

Oil for Food Becomes Isolationist Fodder

If the world's most respected institution of international governance is rendered impotent by accusations as distorted and exaggerated as the "Oil for Food Scandal," we should all fear the consequences.
 
 
LIKE THIS ARTICLE ?
Join our mailing list:

Sign up to stay up to date on the latest World headlines via email.

 
 
 
 

The CIA's Duelfer report may have confirmed the gross falsity of the WMD claims invoked by the Bush administration to justify its war against Iraq, but it has also triggered a feeding frenzy in the growing attacks against the United Nations. In January the Iraqi newspaper Al Mada published a list of people and organizations, including UN personnel, who supposedly received vouchers from the Iraqi government to purchase oil. In April the General Accounting Office (since renamed the Government Accountability Office) published a report claiming that the Oil for Food (OFF) program had been rife with corruption and that through smuggling and kickbacks, Saddam Hussein had managed to acquire more than $10 billion in illicit funds. A series of congressional investigations followed, featuring conservative witnesses who pilloried the UN for incompetence, corruption and general unfitness. In the latest hearings chaired by Republican Norm Coleman, the committee staff claimed that Saddam's access to illicit funds totalled over $21 billion – twice the sum claimed by the CIA – and that the money went to terrorists around the world, not to mention (rather astonishingly) the post-Saddam insurgency.

If it is true that Benon Sevan, former head of the OFF program, accepted illicit oil vouchers, then that may well constitute fraud (although the evidence cited against him so far has been tenuous). But it would also have been in direct violation of clear UN policies – hardly an indicator of institutional corruption.

Rarely mentioned, either at the hearings or in the press coverage, was the fundamental distinction between the policies established by the Secretariat and the UN agencies and those that result from decisions of particular member states within the highly politicized Security Council. For example, the CIA report says that the bulk of the illicit transactions were "government to government agreements" between Iraq and a few other countries, for trade outside the OFF program. According to the report, they resulted in income to Iraq of $7.5 billion.

The largest of these arrangements was with Jordan – revenue from which totaled about $4.5 billion. This trade arrangement was the single largest source of Iraqi income outside the OFF program. From 1990 until the OFF program began in late 1996, "Jordan was the key to Iraq's financial survival," according to the report. Why didn't "the UN" do something about it? Because the Security Council – where the United States was by far the single most influential member – decided in May 1991 that no action would be taken to interfere in Iraq's trade with Jordan, America's closest ally in the Arab world.

Likewise, the maritime smuggling that took place under the nose of "the UN" in fact took place under the nose of something called the Multinational Interception Force, a group of member nations that responded to the general invitation of the Security Council for nations to interdict Iraqi smuggling. The "UN" Multinational Interception Force turns out to have consisted almost entirely of the US Navy. The commander of the MIF was at every point, from 1991 to 2003, a rear admiral or vice admiral from the U.S. Fifth Fleet. The United States contributed the overwhelming majority of ships – hundreds in fact. Britain provided the deputy commander and some naval forces and other countries contributed a few ships. The UN itself provided no forces or commanders. "The UN" failure to interdict Saddam's tankers of illicit oil turns out, in nearly every regard, to have been a U.S. naval operation.

The much-vaunted kickbacks on import contracts also turn out to be not quite as advertised. Saddam, the claim goes, inflated the price of import contracts by five to 10 percent, then received the difference in cash from the contractors. Thousands of contracts, stretching over years, were involved; how could the UN have been so incompetent as not to notice? In fact, prices inflated by only five or 10 percent were difficult to detect precisely because the amounts were so small and often within the normal range of market prices. But when pricing irregularities were large enough that they might have indicated kickbacks, the UN staff did notice. On more than seventy occasions, the staff brought these to the attention of the 661 Committee, the Security Council body charged with implementing the sanctions. On no occasion did the United States block or delay the contracts to prevent the kickbacks from occurring. Although the United States, citing security concerns, blocked billions of dollars of humanitarian contracts – $5 billion were on hold as of July 2002 – it never took action to stop kickbacks, even when they were obvious and well documented.

submit to reddit

-
Email
Print
Share
LIKED THIS ARTICLE? JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST
Stay up to date with the latest World headlines via email
Advertisement
Most Read
Most Emailed
Most Discussed
On REDDIT
On DIGG
 
loading most read content ..
Advertisement
Pro-Medical Pot Candidate Defeats Dispensary-Buster in Dem Primary for Oregon AG

By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet

 
 
Occupiers Sit Down in Times Square, Declare Another NYC is Possible

By Sarah Seltzer | AlterNet

 
 
Colorado Senate Fails to Pass 'D-U-High' Bill, Rejecting Unscientific Limit for Blood's THC Content

By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet

 
 
Why No One Showed Up for the "Americans Elect" Nomination

By BooMan | Booman Tribune

 
 
Rush Limbaugh's Shady Induction Into 'Hall of Famous Missourians' Bans Dems, Dodges Feminists

By Eric Boehlert | Media Matters

 
 
Study: Marijuana Relieves Symptoms of Multiple Sclerosis

By Paul Armentano | NORML

 
 
Morgan Stanley Shareholder Meeting Mic-Checked, Protesters Demand Accountability from MultiMillionaire CEO

By Sarah Jaffe | AlterNet

 
 
Brownback Signs Law That Allows Pharmacists to Guess if Women Are Having an Abortion, Refuse Them Service

By Robin Marty | RH Reality Check

 
 
Federal Appeals Court Rules Against Secretive Big Money Campaign Donors

By Steven Rosenfeld | AlterNet

 
 
Culture War Commencements: Obama's and Romney's Speeches to Grads Show Stark Differences

By Irin Carmon | Salon.com

 
 
 
Reverend Billy Talen
 
 
 
loading ...
POWERED BY DIGG'S USERS
 
[ page served from web 2 ]