GENESIS: Cheney Oil.htm
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(Washington, August 2) Under the guidance of Richard Cheney, a get-the-government-
out-of-my-face conservative, Halliburton Company over
the past five years has emerged as a corporate welfare hog, benefiting
from at least $3.8 billion in federal contracts and taxpayer-insured
loans.
One of these loans was approved in April by the U.S. Export-Import Bank. It guaranteed $489 million in credits to a Russian oil company whose roots are imbedded in a legacy of KGB and Communist Party corruption, as well as drug trafficking and organized crime funds, according to Russian and U.S. sources and documents. Those claims are hotly disputed by the Russian oil firm’s holding company. Halliburton, which lobbied for the Ex-Im loan after the State Department initially asserted that the deal would run counter to the "national interest,” will receive $292 million of those funds to refurbish a massive Siberian oil field owned by the Russian company, the Tyumen Oil Co., which is controlled by a conglomerate called the Alfa Group. The April Ex-Im taxpayer-insured loan, which has the effect of
reducing the borrower’s interest rate and extending its repayment
term, is but the latest of a series of government bank guarantees from
which Halliburton has benefited under Cheney, who joined the company as
chairman and chief executive officer in 1995.
Since then Halliburton and its subsidiaries have undertaken foreign
projects in which Ex-Im and its sister U.S. bank, the Overseas Private
Investment Corp., have guaranteed or made direct loans totaling $1.5
billion, mostly over the last two years. That compares with a total of
about $100 million the government banks insured and loaned in the five
years before Cheney joined the company. Under Cheney, Halliburton—largely through its Brown & Root
subsidiary—has garnered $2.3 billion in U.S. government contracts.
This is almost double the $1.2 billion it earned from the government in
the five years before he arrived. Most of the contracts have been with
the U.S. Army for engineering work in a variety of hot spots, including
Bosnia, Albania, Kosovo and Haiti. Halliburton spokeswoman Wendy Hall issued this statement: High-level access Wall Street analysts praise Cheney’s stewardship of the company and
attribute his ability to attract government contracts and grants to his
high-level access to the corridors of power that stems from his days as
defense secretary under President George Bush. If he becomes vice
president, according to a Halliburton official who admires Cheney but
asked to remain anonymous, "the company’s government contracts
would obviously go through the roof.” If Halliburton has benefited from government generosity, it also has
reciprocated with substantial political contributions, largely to
Republicans. During Cheney’s five years at the helm, the company has
donated $1,212,000 in soft and hard money to candidates and parties,
according to numbers compiled by the non-partisan Center for Responsive
Politics. In the five years prior to his arrival, the company had given
$534,750. Though the White House has been Democratic during those years,
Congress, which appropriates funds for OPIC and the Ex-Im bank, has been
controlled by Republicans. The goodwill generated by those political contributions and extensive
lobbying by Halliburton and its allies on the Tyumen project helped save
the day after the White House and State Department in December directed
the Ex-Im Bank to delay approval of the $489 million credit guarantee.
The administration wanted the breathing space after complaints by
Western investors and companies that they had been defrauded by Tyumen
in an unrelated dispute. One of the aggrieved firms was BP-Amoco, the largest oil and gas
producer in the United States. It and the others claimed that through
fraud and other unsavory practices in a Russian bankruptcy proceeding,
Tyumen had effectively "stolen” a vast oil field in which they
held substantial equity. BP-Amoco commissioned a private investigative report on Tyumen, which
was slipped to the CIA through an intermediary. That report, a CIA official confirmed, contained 2 1/2 pages labeled
"criminal situation.’ The CIA promptly classified the report
"secret’ and passed it along to the Ex-Im Bank. Further, the CIA
briefed Ex-Im about its own material on Tyumen in December and told the
bank that the BP-Amoco investigative report "tracked” with its
own information. 'Criminal situation' The CIA declined to discuss with The Public i what was
contained in the brief section labeled "criminal situation." Marsha E. Berry, vice president of communications for the Ex-Im Bank,
said that the bank was "not aware of Tyumen's connections to the
mob. We take all due diligence in researching our partners and making
sure that they are legitimate." An Ex-Im attorney who worked on the Tyumen account said that the bank
checked with both the CIA and the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and concluded
that there was "no evidence to support the allegations” raised in
the BP-Amoco report, which he said included links to Russian organized
crime. He would not further discuss the allegations. He said that the
CIA had rated Tyumen in the upper quartile of Russian oil companies in
above-board business practices. Some allegations of organized crime and drug activities involving
Tyumen’s parent company, the Alfa Group, had been made public in
Russia last year. The allegations were contained in a report delivered in 1997 by
anonymous officials from the FSB (the Russian equivalent of the FBI) to
the national security committee of the Duma, or lower house of
parliament. A Russian-American specialist on business practices in the former
Soviet Union who has worked with the White House and Pentagon told The
Public i that the allegations contained in the 1997 report have been
the subject of an investigation by the FSB but that the probe, for
unexplained reasons, had been "put away for a better day." Some of the key elements in the FSB report, a translation of which
was obtained by The Public i, are virtually identical to those
provided to a former senior American intelligence officer two years
earlier by a former KGB major who had been part of the Soviet spy
agency’s ideological counterintelligence branch. The former U.S. intelligence officer, who asked not to be further
identified, wrote a contemporaneous report of what the former KGB major,
at the time working for two banks formed by the KGB, told him in
1995.The intelligence specialist provided a copy of his report to The
Public i. Money laundering, drug trafficking That document and the FSB report claim that Alfa Bank, one of
Russia’s largest and most profitable, as well as Alfa Eko, a trading
company, had been deeply involved in the early 1990s in laundering of
Russian and Colombian drug money and in trafficking drugs from the Far
East to Europe. The former KGB major, who with the fall of communism in the late
1980s had himself been involved in the plan by the KGB and Communist
Party to loot state enterprises, said that Alfa Bank was founded with
party and KGB funds, and quickly attracted rogue agents who had served
in anti-organized-crime units. "They (the rogue agents on the
bank’s payroll) quickly determined that dealing in drugs would bring
the highest profits with literally no risk in Russia," according to
the former KGB officer. He claimed that a "large channel of heroin transit was
established from Burma through Laos, Vietnam, to the Far East
[Siberia]." From there the drugs were camouflaged as flour and
sugar shipments and forwarded on to Germany. The drug operation was
controlled by a Chechen mob family, he said. The FSB report, too, claimed that the Alfa Group’s top executives,
oligarchs Mikhail Fridman and Pyotr Aven, "allegedly participated
in the transit of drugs from Southeast Asia through Russia and into
Europe." Reached by telephone, Alexander Tolchinskiy, an officer of Alfa Bank
in Moscow, described as "nonsense” the reports that Alfa or its
bosses had been involved in the trafficking of drugs or the laundering
of drug profits. Another Alfa official said that the reports were
planted by representatives of a competing company, whom he would not
identify, which wanted to take over the commodities trade. 'Way off the mark' A lawyer at the blue-chip Washington law firm of Akin, Gump, which
represents Tyumen, said that the claims that the company’s top
officers had been involved in narcotics trafficking and money laundering
were "way off the mark.” The lawyer declined to be further
identified. Rory Davenport of Fleischman Hillard, which handles Tyumen’s public
relations in Washington, said that his firm had performed a background
check on Tyumen and "there was no concern” about Tyumen's alleged
mob connection. Both the FSB and KGB reports cite an event in 1995 in which residents
of a Siberian town became "intoxicated," according to the
American’s report, and "poisoned," according to the FSB
report, after they had eaten heroin-laced sugar that had been shipped in
a rail car container leased to Alfa Eko, which specializes in the
shipment of foodstuffs. The account from the former KGB officer was that a railroad worker
had stolen a sack of sugar from the container and sold it to the persons
who became ill. The FSB document said that the incident occurred in
Khabarovsk, a large city in Siberia. The former KGB officer only
described the location as Siberia. The FSB report said that within days of the incident, Ministry of
Internal Affairs (MVD) agents conducted raids of Alfa Eko buildings and
found "drugs and other compromising documentation." Both reports claim that Alfa Bank has laundered drug funds from
Russian and Colombian drug cartels. The FSB document claims that at the end of 1993, a top Alfa official
met with Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, the now-imprisoned financial
mastermind of Colombia’s notorious Cali cartel, "to conclude an
agreement about the transfer of money into Alfa Bank from offshore zones
such as the Bahamas, Gibraltar and others. The plan was to insert it
back into the Russian economy through the purchase of stock in Russian
companies." The account from the former KGB officer is unclear about Alfa’s
alleged role with Rodriguez, but apparently confirms that "in
1993-94 there were attempts of the so-called ‘Chess Player’
[Rodriguez’s nickname] to launder and legalize large amounts of
criminal money in Russia.’ He reported that there was evidence
"regarding [Alfa Bank’s] involvement with the money laundering of
. . . Latin American drug cartels." Pattern not unusual The former KGB officer claimed that the Alfa empire had its roots in
a cooperative formed by KGB officers in 1987 to import computers. It
would profit by avoiding import duties and launder funds by creating
phony invoices to themselves reflecting 500 percent markups in their
cost. The FSB document said that in the 1980s, Alfa’s Fridman
"secretly cooperated with operatives of the KGB," was active
in the Komsomol (Communist Youth League) and established the
cooperatives Gelios and Orsk to purchase computers from abroad. The former U.S. intelligence officer who interviewed the ex-KGB major
said that such a pattern was not unusual. He said that the KGB and
Komsomol often teamed up with bright young entrepreneurs like Fridman in
the late 1980s and early 1990s and provided seed money to launch private
ventures, often involving the importing of computers or the formation of
banks. He said that Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, whose
reputedly heavily mobbed-up Menatep bank folded in 1998, also got his
seed money from the Komsomol and also initially dealt in computers. He
said that 47 percent of the KGB agents in the Soviet Union had been
groomed by Komsomol. The FSB report also claims that top officials of the Alfa Group
"cooperated" with a number of Russian crime organizations,
notably the notorious Solntsevo mob family in Moscow. The
Russian-American specialist on business practices in Russia, who has a
wide array of contacts inside Russia’s law enforcement and
intelligence communities, agreed that Alfa Bank, as well as others, are
used by the Solntsevo crime family. As with most of Russia’s post-Soviet privatization efforts, Alfa
Group’s takeover of Tyumen Oil was complicated and fraught with
allegations of impropriety. In July of 1997, Novy Holdings, a joint
venture involving Alfa and a New York-based Russian-American firm,
Access Industries, purchased a 40 percent stake in Tyumen Oil from the
Russian government for roughly $810 million. The sale, however, was not
without controversy. Russian President Boris Yeltsin himself instructed
his privatization czar, Deputy Prime Minister Alfred Kokh, to
"personally control the investment tender of the TNK company [Tyumen
Oil]” because he was concerned that Tyumen’s worth might have been
grossly undervalued due to Alfa’s improper influence on the audit of
the oil giant. A second cash auction for the remainder of the oil company was
scheduled for later that year, with most analysts predicting that Alfa
would seek to increase its stake to a majority position. But the auction
was suspended in November of 1997, drawing criticism that the government
was deliberately delaying the sale of Tyumen in order to give Alfa
additional time to raise the necessary funds it needed to take control
of the company. The most outspoken critic of Alfa’s attempt to wrest
control of Tyumen was Viktor Paly, general director of
Nizhnevartovskneftegaz, Tyumen Oil’s production subsidiary. Paly held
a 9% stake in Tyumen Oil through an off-shore company Cadet
Establishment. By February of 1998, however, following meetings at Alfa’s offices
in Moscow, Paly agreed to divest his stake in Tyumen Oil to Alfa. One
month later, Alfa bought an additional 1.17 percent of Tyumen Oil as
part of the long-delayed second auction, raising its total stake in the
oil company to a 51 percent controlling position. Was Cheney's chief of staff Tyumen could have significant access to the White House should the
Bush-Cheney ticket win in the November presidential elections.
Tyumen’s lead attorney at Akin Gump is James C. Langdon Jr., a
managing partner at the firm. He is also one of George W. Bush’s
"Pioneers,” one of the elite fund raisers who have brought in at
least $100,000 for the Republican presidential hopeful. Last June in Washington, Langdon helped coordinate a $2.2 million
fund raiser for Bush, and agreed to help recruit 100 lawyers and
lobbyists in the capital to raise $25,000 each. Langdon’s secretary
told The Public i that he was away on travel this week and could
not be immediately reached. Tyumen could also look to one of Cheney’s deputies for access
should the Republicans triumph in November. One of Halliburton’s top
lobbyists, Dave Gribbin, was Cheney’s chief of staff at the Defense
Department during the Bush administration, and his lobbying activities
have borne fruit for Halliburton over the last several years. As with Halliburton’s campaign donations, the company’s lobbying
expenditures increased under Cheney’s watch. In 1996, the company
spent $280,000 on lobbying. In 1997, the company increased those
expenditures to $360,000, to $540,000 in 1998, and to $600,000 in
1999.That upward trend parallels the increasing success Halliburton has
had in winning government contracts, loans, and guarantees under
Cheney’s direction. Not surprisingly, several key issues relating to Halliburton’s
success in securing government largesse appear frequently on the
company’s lobbying reports. Among them are "OPIC
Reauthorization,” Defense Appropriations Bills,” and "Foreign
Operations Appropriations Bills Funding EXIM, OPIC, and TDA” [the
Trade and Development Agency, a government agency similar to Ex-Im and
one that also funds Halliburton projects around the world]. Gribbin also
lists "EXIM,” "OPIC,” and "TDA” as federal agencies
that were contacted as part of the company’s lobbying activities.
Gribbin did not return repeated calls from The Public i. In no small irony, the official Bush Web site, recently revamped to
accommodate the addition of Cheney to the ticket, notes in the
"Foreign Policy” section that the duo supports "redirecting
American assistance, investment and loans to the Russian people, not to
the bank accounts of corrupt officials.” Related article: http://www.nexusmagazine.com/bushcheney.html Taken from: http://www.public-i.org/story_01_080200.htm |