http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/9571

Baker Takes The Whole Loaf

Greg Palast is an award-winning investigative reporter for BBC 
Television's Newsnight and The Observer of London. His most recent 
book is The Best Democracy Money Can Buy: An Investigative Reporter 
Exposes The Truth About Globalization, Corporate Cons and 
High-Finance Fraudsters, published by Plume, an imprint of The 
Penguin Group.

Well, ho ho ho! It's an early Christmas for James Baker III.

All year the elves at his law firm, Baker Botts of Texas, have been 
working day and night to prevent the families of the victims of the 
9/11 attack from seeking information from Saudi Arabia on the 
Kingdom's funding of Al Qaeda fronts.

It's tough work, but this week came the payoff when President Bush 
appointed Baker, the firm's senior partner, to restructure the debts 
of the nation of Iraq.

And who will net the big bucks under Jim Baker's plan? Answer: his 
client, Saudi Arabia, which claims $30.7 billion due from Iraq plus 
$12 billion in reparations from the First Gulf war.

Puppet Strings

Let's ponder what's going on here.

We are talking about something called "sovereign debt." And unless 
George Bush has finally 'fessed up and named himself Pasha of Iraq, 
he is not their sovereign. Mr. Bush has no authority to seize control 
of that nation's assets nor its debts.

But our President is not going to let something as trivial as 
international law stand in the way of a quick buck for Mr. Baker. To 
get around the wee issue that Bush has no legal authority to mess 
with Iraq's debt, the White House has crafted a neat little 
subterfuge. The official press release says the President has not 
appointed Mr. Baker. Rather Mr. Bush is "responding to a request from 
the Iraqi Governing Council." That is, Bush is acting on the 
authority of the puppet government he imposed on Iraqis at gunpoint.

I will grant the Iraqi "government" has some knowledge of 
international finance; its key member, Ahmed Chalabi, is a convicted 
bank swindler.

The Bush team must see the other advantage in having the rump rulers 
of Iraq pretend to choose Mr. Baker; the U.S. Senate will not have to 
review or confirm the appointment. If you remember, Henry Kissinger 
ran away from the 9/11 commission with his consulting firm tucked 
between his legs after the Senate demanded he reveal his client list. 
In the case of Jim Baker, who will be acting as a de facto U.S. 
Treasury Secretary for international affairs, our elected Congress 
will have no chance to ask him who is paying his firm, nor even 
require him to get off conflicting payrolls.

This takes the Bush administration' Conflicts-R-Us appointments 
process to a new low.

Or maybe there's no conflict at all. If you see Jim Baker's new job 
as working not to protect a new Iraqi democracy but to protect the 
loot of the old theocracy of Saudi Arabia, the conflict disappears.

Iraq's debt totals something on the order of $120 billion to $150 
billion, depending on who's counting. And who's counting is very 
important.

Much of the so-called debt to Saudi Arabia was given to Saddam 
Hussein to fight a proxy war for the Saudis against their hated foe, 
the Shi'ia of Iran. And as disclosed by a former Saudi diplomat, the 
kingdom's sheiks handed about $7 billion to Saddam under the table in 
the 1980's to build an "Islamic bomb."

Should Iraqis today and those not yet born have to be put in a 
debtor's prison to pay off the secret payouts to Saddam? James 
Wolfensohn, president of the World Bank, says 'No!' Wolfensohn has 
never been on my Christmas card list, but in this case he's got it 
right: Iraq should simply cancel $120 billion in debt.

Normally, the World Bank is in charge of post-war debt restructuring. 
That's why the official name of the World Bank is "International Bank 
for Reconstruction and Development." This is the Bank's expertise. 
Bush has rushed Baker in to pre-empt the debt write-off the World 
Bank would certainly promote.

"I Fixed Florida"

Why is our President so concerned with the wishes of Mr. Baker's 
clientele? What does Bush owe Baker? Let me count the ways, beginning 
with the 2000 election.

Just last week Baker said, I fixed the election in Florida for George 
Bush. That was the substance of his remarks last week to an audience 
of Russian big wigs as reported to me by my somewhat astonished 
colleagues at BBC television.

It was Baker, as consiglieri to the Bush family, who came up with the 
strategy of maneuvering the 2000 Florida vote count into a Supreme 
Court packed with politicos.

Baker's claim to have fixed the election was not a confession; it was 
a boast. He meant to dazzle current and potential clients about his 
Big In with the Big Boy in the White House. Baker's firm is already a 
top player in the Great Game of seizing Caspian Sea oil. (An 
executive of Exxon-Mobil, one of Baker Botts's clients, has been 
charged with evading taxes on bribes paid in Kazakhstan.)

All In The Family

Over the years, Jim Baker has taken responsibility for putting bread 
on the Bush family table. As Senior Counsel to Carlyle, the 
arms-dealing investment group, Baker arranged for the firm to hire 
both President Bush 41 after he was booted from the White House and 
President Bush 43 while his daddy was still in office.

Come to think of it, maybe I'm being a bit too dismissive of the 
Iraqi make-believe government. After all, it's not as if George Bush 
were elected by voters either. It would be more accurate to say that 
TWO puppet governments have agreed to let the man who has always 
pulled the strings come out from behind the curtain, take a bow, take 
charge-then take the money and run.


Published: Dec 09 2003


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