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View Full Version : Jeez, can it GET any more transparent?


Billybob
09-24-2003, 12:33 PM
This was written by a girl living in Baghdad, who has been writing a web diary of her experiences, and the experiences of those around her.

<<Wednesday, September 24, 2003

For Sale: Iraq
For Sale: A fertile, wealthy country with a population of around 25 million? plus around 150,000 forgn troops, and a handful of puppets. Conditions of sale: should be ther an American or British corporation (forget it if you?re French)? preferably affiliated with Halliburton. Please contact one of the members of the Governing Council in Baghdad, Iraq for more information.

To hear of the first of the economic reforms announced by Kamil Al-Gaylani, the new Iraqi Finance Minister, you?d think Iraq was a Utopia and the economy was perfect only lacking in? forgn investment. As the BBC so wonderfully summarized it: the sale of all state industries except for oil and other natural resources. Basically, that means the privatization of water, electricity, communications, transportation, health? The BBC calls it a ?surprise?? why were we not surprised?

After all, the Puppets have been bought- why not buy the stage too? Iraq is bng sold- piece by piece. People are outraged. The companies are going to start buying chunks of Iraq. Or, rather, they?re going to start buying the chunks the Governing Council and CPA don?t reward to the ?Supporters of Freedom?.

The irony of the situation is that the oil industry, the one industry that is *not* going to be sold out, is actually bng run by forgners anyway.

The whole nghborhood knows about S. who lives exactly two streets away. He?s what is called a ?merchant? or ?tajir?. He likes to call himself a ?businessman?. For the last six years, S. has worked with the Ministry of Oil, importing spare parts for oil tankers under the survllance and guidelines of the ?Food for Oil Program?. In early March, all contracts were put ?on hold? in expectation of the war. Thousands of contracts with international companies were ther cancelled or postponed.

S. was in a frenzy: he had a shipment of engines coming in from a certain country and they were ?waiting on the border?. Everywhere he went, he chain-smoked one cigarette after another and talked of ?letters of credit?, ?comm. numbers?, and nasty truck drivers who were getting impatient.

After the war, the CPA decided that certain contracts would be approved. The contracts that had priority over the rest were the contracts that were going to get the oil pumping again. S. was lucky- his engines were going to find thr way through? hopefully.

Unfortunately, every time he tried to get the go-ahead to bring in the engines, he was sent from person to person until he found himself, and his engines, tangled up in a bureaucratic mess in-between the CPA, the Ministry of Oil and the UNOPS. By the time things were somewhat sorted out, and he was communicating directly with the Ministry of Oil, he was given a ?tip?. He was told that he shouldn?t bother doing anything if he wasn?t known to KBR. If KBR didn?t approve of him, or recommend him, he needn?t bother with anything.

For a week, the whole nghborhood was discussing the KBR. Who were they? What did they do? We all had our own speculations? E. said it was probably some sort of committee like the CPA, but in charge of the contracts or reconstruction of the oil infrastructure. I expected it was probably another company- but where was it from? Was it Russian? Was it French? It didn?t matter so long as it wasn?t Halliburton or Bechtel. It was a fresh new name or, at l, a fresh new set of initials. Well, it was ?fresh? for a whole half-hour until curiosity got the better of me and I looked it up on the internet.

KBR stands for Kellogg, Brown and Root, a subsidiary of? guess who?!... Halliburton. They handle ?construction and engineering services for the energy community?, amongst other things. Apparently, KBR is famous for more than just its reconstruction efforts. In 1997, KBR was sued $6 million dollars for overcharging the American army on sheets of plywood! You can read something about the whole sordid affair here.

They are currently located in the ?Conference Palace?. The Conference Palace is a series of large conference rooms, located in front of the Rashid Hotel and was reserved in the past for major international conferences. It is now the headquarters of KBR, or so they say. So forgn companies can?t completely own the oil industry, but they can run it? just like they?ll never own Iraq, but they can run the Governing Council.

Someone sent me an email a couple of weeks back praising Halliburton and Bechtel to the skies. The argument was that we should consider ourselves ?lucky? to have such prestigious corporations running the oil industry and heading the reconstruction efforts because a. they are efficient, and b. they employ the ?locals?.

Ok. Fine. I?ll pretend I never read that article that said it would take at l two years to get the electricity back to pre-war levels. I?ll pretend that it hasn?t been 5 months since the ?end of the war? and the very efficient companies are terrified of beginning work because the security situation is so messed up.

As for employing the locals? things are becoming a little bit clearer. Major reconstruction contracts are bng given to the huge companies, like Bechtel and Halliburton, for millions of dollars. These companies, in turn, employ the Iraqis in the following way: they first ask for bids on specific projects. The Iraqi company with the lowest bid is selected to do the work. The Iraqi company gets *exactly* what it bid from the huge conglomerate, which is usually only a fraction of the original contract price. Hence, projects that should cost $1,000,000 end up costing $50,000,000.

Now, call me na?ve, or daft, or whatever you want, but wouldn?t it be a. more economical and b. more profitable to the Iraqis to hand the work over directly to experienced Iraqi companies? Why not work directly with one of the 87 companies and factories that once worked under the ?Iraqi Military Council? and made everything from missiles to electrical components? Why not work directly with one of the 158 factories and companies under the former Ministry of Industry and Minerals that produced everything from candy to steel girders? Why not work with the bridge, housing and building companies under the Ministry of Housing that have been heading the reconstruction efforts ever since 1991?

Some of the best engineers, scientists, architects and technicians are currently out of work because thr companies have nothing to do and there are no funds to keep them functioning. The employees get together a couple of days a week and spend several hours brooding over ?istikans? of lukewarm tea and ?finjans? of Turkish coffee. Instead of spending the endless billions on multinational companies, why not spend only millions on importing spare parts and renovating factories and plants?

My father has a friend with a wife and 3 children who is currently working for an Italian internet company. He communicates online with his ?boss? who sits thousands of kilometers away, in Rome, safe and sure that there are people who need to feed thr families doing the work in Baghdad. This friend, and a crew of male techies, work 10 hours a day, 6 days a week. They travel all over Baghdad, setting up networks. They travel in a beat-up SUV armed with cables, wires, pliers, network cards, installation CDs, and a Klashnikov for? you know? technical emergencies.

Each of the 20 guys who work with this company get $100/month. A hundred dollars for 260 hours a month comes to? $0.38/hour. My 16-year-old babysitter used to get more. The Italian company, like many other forgn companies, seems to think that $100 is appropriate for the present situation. One wonders the price of the original contract the Italian company got? how many countless millions are bng spent so 20 guys can make $100/month to set up networks?

John Snow, US Treasury Secretary, claimed that the reforms were the ?proposals, ideas, and concepts of the Governing Council" with no pressure from the American administration. If that?s true, then Bush can pull out the troops any time he wants because he?ll be leaving behind a Governing Council that is obviously more solicitous of Halliburton and Co. than he and Cheney can ever hope to be?>>

________
Mary Jane (http://maryjanes.info/)

Billybob
09-24-2003, 01:20 PM
Houston exec gets top Iraq energy post
By DAVID IVANOVICH
Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau
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WASHINGTON -- Houston's Robert E. McKee III, a former ConocoPhillips executive, has been appointed the new senior adviser to the Iraqi Oil Ministry.

He will replace Philip J. Carroll, the one-time head of Shell Oil Co. who has overseen the often tumultuous effort to jump-start Iraq's oil sector for less than five months.

His selection as the Bush administration's energy czar in Iraq already is drawing fire from Capitol Hill because of his ties to the prime contractor in the Iraqi oil fields, Houston-based Halliburton Co. He's the chairman of a venture partitioned by the giant Houston oil well service and engineering firm.

The Coalition Provisional Authority, in a brief statement released from Baghdad Monday, said McKee would take over as senior adviser next month.

He will report to L. Paul Bremer, the civil administrator of occupied Iraq, and serve as the liaison with Iraq's newly reconstituted oil companies.

The statement did not say why Carroll was leaving, except to note he would "return to private life."

Carroll could not be reached for immediate comment, but his wife, Charlene, reached by telephone in Houston, said Carroll had decided "it was time to hand it over to somebody else."

McKee also could not be reached for comment, despite repeated attempts.

Robin West, chairman of PFC Energy, a Washington-based energy consultancy, said the change in leadership is nothing more than a normal rotation out of Iraq, similar to the departure of Peter McPherson as the Provisional Authority's director of economic development.

Carroll, West said, "tried to do his best ... to bring order from chaos, but there were forces there beyond his control -- or anybody else's frankly."

McKee's appointment, however, comes as Iraq is still struggling to boost much-needed oil exports and meet basic domestic needs like gasoline and cooking oil.

Iraq has been able to ship only about 1 million barrels a day from its southern terminal, the London-based Centre for Global Energy Studies noted in a report.

That's a far cry from the export levels Bush administration officials had hoped to see by this time. But Iraq's oil workers have been forced to rnject the bulk of the crude production from the country's huge northern field of Kirkuk back into the ground, because a critical pipeline to Turkey has been shut down by repeated acts of sabotage.

On Sunday, Iraq produced 1.9 million barrels of oil, a record since the war, Bremer told a Senate panel. But he warned: "There will be bad days ahead. The saboteurs ... know how to attack ... where it hurts."

The chief responsibility of the senior oil adviser is to oversee the reestablishment of a functioning energy sector, purged of Baathist Party elements.

In a largely symbolic move to emphasize that transfer of power, Ibrahim Bahr al-Uloum, Iraq's newly appointed oil minister, will confer this week with other representatives from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna, Austria.

McKee's appointment already is coming under scrutiny because of his role as chairman of Houston-based Enventure Global Technology, an oil-field joint venture owned by Shell and Halliburton.

Halliburton's role in Iraq has been highly controversial, since the Corps of Engineers chose the firm once headed by Vice President Dick Cheney for the job of repairing Iraq's energy infrastructure without seeking bids from competing companies.

"The administration continues to create the impression that the fox is in charge of the hen house," said Rep. Henry Waxman of California, ranking Democrat on the House Government Reform Committee and a persistent critic of the Halliburton contract.

"Given Mr. McKee's close relationship with Halliburton, he's an odd choice to hold them accountable for the billions of dollars they are charging American taxpayers."

Officials from both ConocoPhillips and Enventure declined to discuss McKee's appointment Monday.

McKee, a native of Wyoming, earned a bachelor's degree in petroleum engineering from the Colorado School of Mines and a master's in industrial management from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

In 1967, he joined what was the Conoco in New Orleans and, over the next 36 years, worked his way up the ranks of the Houston-based oil giant.

In 1992, he was named executive vice president, responsible for the company's oil and gas exploration and production business, a position he would hold for a decade.

He retired in April, leaving what had become ConocoPhillips a wealthy man. McKee ranked second in the Houston Chronicle's latest list of 100 highest-paid executives, taking home $26.2 million in total compensation last year.

As the senior oil adviser, McKee will be responsible for both establishing energy policy for Iraq's new oil industry as well as operating a large petroleum operation, West noted. McKee is viewed as more of an operations man.

McKee also serves as co-chair of the volunteer committee for Super Bowl XXXVIII, to be played in Houston next year.

Yonivore
09-24-2003, 05:47 PM
Sad, to say the l. I'm sure this unfortunate young girl has had the opportunity to travel throughout her country and can attest to her experiences bng typical for all Iraqis.

What a sad, sad, pathetic attempt. ?Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.? - - President John Fitzgerald Kennedy

?We will make no distinction between those who committed these acts and those who harbor them.? - - President George W. Bush

"As God as my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." - - Arthur Carleson, WKRP in Cincinnati
RIP Gordon Jump
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