December 13, 2004
The Oil-For-Food 'Scandal' is a Cynical Smokescreen
by Scott Ritter
United States Senators, led by the Republican Norm
Coleman, have launched a crusade of sorts, seeking to
"expose" the oil-for-food programme implemented by the
United Nations from 1996 until 2003 as the "greatest scandal
in the history of the UN". But this posturing is nothing
more than a hypocritical charade, designed to shift
attention away from the debacle of George Bush's self-made
quagmire in Iraq, and legitimise the invasion of Iraq by
using Iraqi corruption, and not the now-missing weapons of
mass destruction, as the excuse.
The oil-for-food programme was derived from the
US-sponsored Security Council resolution, passed in April
1995 but not implemented until December 1996. During this
time, the CIA sponsored two coup attempts against Saddam,
the second, most famously, a joint effort with the British
that imploded in June 1996, at the height of the "oil for
food" implementation negotiations. The oil-for-food
programme was never a sincere humanitarian relief effort,
but rather a politically motivated device designed to
implement the true policy of the United States - regime
change.
Through various control mechanisms, the United States and
Great Britain were able to turn on and off the flow of oil
as they saw best. In this way, the Americans were able to
authorise a $1bn exemption concerning the export of Iraqi
oil for Jordan, as well as legitimise the billion-dollar
illegal oil smuggling trade over the Turkish border, which
benefited NATO ally Turkey as well as fellow regime-change
plotters in Kurdistan. At the same time as US Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright was negotiating with Russian
Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov concerning a
Russian-brokered deal to end a stand-off between Iraq and
the UN weapons inspectors in October-November 1997, the
United States turned a blind eye to the establishment of a
Russian oil company set up on Cyprus.
This oil company, run by Primakov's sister, bought oil
from Iraq under "oil for food" at a heavy discount, and then
sold it at full market value to primarily US companies,
splitting the difference evenly with Primakov and the
Iraqis. This US-sponsored deal resulted in profits of
hundreds of million of dollars for both the Russians and
Iraqis, outside the control of "oil for food". It has been
estimated that 80 per cent of the oil illegally smuggled out
of Iraq under "oil for food" ended up in the United States.
Likewise, using its veto-wielding powers on the 661
Committee, set up in 1990 to oversee economic sanctions
against Iraq, the United States was able to block billions
of dollars of humanitarian goods legitimately bought by Iraq
under the provisions of the oil-for-food agreement. And when
Saddam proved too adept at making money from kickbacks, the
US and Britain devised a new scheme of oil sales which
forced potential buyers to commit to oil contracts where the
price would be set after the oil was sold, an insane process
which quickly brought oil sales to a halt, starving the
oil-for-food programme of money to the point that billions
of dollars of humanitarian contracts could not be paid for
by the United Nations.
The corruption evident in the oil-for-food programme was
real, but did not originate from within the United Nations,
as Norm Coleman and others are charging. Its origins are in
a morally corrupt policy of economic strangulation of Iraq
implemented by the United States as part of an overall
strategy of regime change. Since 1991, the United States had
made it clear - through successive statements by James
Baker, George W Bush and Madeleine Albright - that economic
sanctions, linked to Iraq's disarmament obligation, would
never be lifted even if Iraq fully complied and disarmed,
until Saddam Hussein was removed from power. This policy
remained unchanged for over a decade, during which time
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died as a result of these
sanctions.
While money derived from the off-the-book sale of oil did
indeed go into the purchase of conventional weapons and the
construction of presidential palaces, the vast majority of
these funds were poured into economic recovery programmes
that saw Iraq emerge from near total economic ruin in 1996.
By 2002, on the eve of the US-led invasion, Baghdad was full
of booming businesses, restaurants were full, and families
walked freely along well-lit parks. Compare and contrast
that image with the reality of Baghdad today, and the
ultimate corruption that was the oil-for-food programme
becomes self-evident.
Scott Ritter is a former UN weapons inspector in Iraq
(1991-1998) and the author of 'Frontier
Justice: Weapons of Mass Destruction.
© 2004 Independent Newspapers, Ltd
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