If the facts of their timeline check out, then Enron was, true to its rootin
tootin Texas roots, even into exploration in Asia (though as has been noted,
they were dumping fixed assets to raise cash). Another interesting thread is
how Unocal has been interested in buying up Enron assets. And just whose 300
million dollars is it in that Carlyle Global Energy fund? Post-Enron offers
some nice distressed assets, but if you are shopping for them, might I
advise you to stay away from their  financial services division!

http://thunderbay.sfimc.net/news/2002/03/42.php


Unocal/Enron Timeline of involvement in S. Asian Oil
by Davo March 3 2002, Sun, 1:35pm


I thought some might fin this interesting, given how much Canadian energy
policy is being driven by the 'Bush Oil Team' agenda. Read what the same
people dictating what will be done with our resources have been up to in
Afghanistan and the rest of Southern Asia.

Unocal AND Enron wanted the Trans-Afghan Gas Pipeline built. Enron had built
a huge power plant in India that DESPERATELY needed cheap natural gas.

June 5, 1992: Enron sent a group of officials to New Delhi to make
arrangements to survey the land around Dabhol for the purpose of building a
large power plant.

June 20, 1992: Enron and the government of the state of Maharashtra signed a
non-binding memorandum of understanding to build the plant. This led to
formation of the Dabhol Power Company (DPC), a joint venture of Enron and
two other American corporations, General Electric and Bechtel.

February, 1993: A formal agreement was signed for a plant that could
generate about 2450 megawatts at an approximate cost of $3 billion.

April, 1993: Heinz Vergin, World Bank manager for India, rejects Enron's
loan application, saying that the Dabhol plant is "not economically viable."

November, 1993: The Central Electricity Authority in New Delhi gave
provisional clearance to the project. It was the largest single foreign
investment in India.

1994: The Washington-based Export-Import Bank approved a $302 million loan
toward a $3 billion Enron-controlled power plant in India. President Clinton
took an interest in the deal, asking the U.S. ambassador to that country and
his former chief of staff, Thomas F. "Mack" McLarty, then a presidential
adviser, to monitor the proposal.

August, 1995: Clinton administration's cabinet members, Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin and Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary, personally urged India to
accept Enron's proposed project.

October, 1995: Indian Prime Minister Rao and Iranian Foreign Minister Ali
Akbar Velayati discussed a routing alternatives for a natural gas pipeline,
including one which would run through Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, and
Pakistan.

1996: "Mack" McLarty, who later became a paid Enron director, spoke with Ken
Lay on several occasions about the plant. Four days before India granted
approval for Enron's project, the Houston-based firm contributed $100,000 to
the Democratic Party.

1996: Enron signed a contract giving it rights to explore 11 gas fields in
Uzbekistan, a project costing $1.3 billion. The goal was to sell gas to the
Russian markets, and link to Unocal's southern export pipeline crossing
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Afghanistan.

January 8, 1996: Enron and the state government of Maharashtra reached a new
agreement that would shift some of the construction costs and lower the
electricity tariffs.

June,1997: As an advisor for Unocal, Zalmay Khalilzad drew up a risk
analysis of a proposed gas pipeline from the former Soviet republic of
Turkmenistan across Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Indian Ocean. He
participated in talks and social meetings between Unocal and Taliban
officials in 1997.

June 3, 1997: Police stormed the homes of several women in western India who
had led a massive protest against Enron's new natural-gas plant near their
fishing village. According to Amnesty International, the women were dragged
from their homes and beaten by officers paid by Enron.

November 14, 1997: Enron International's CEO Rebecca Mark unveiled an energy
plan that included a $300 million project to build a pipeline from Dabhol to
Hazira and to the North to add 1200 km of complimentary pipeline system to
the existing HBJ pipeline at a cost of $900 million.

December 7, 1997: Unocal invited a Taliban contingency to visit them in
Houston, Texas, housed them in five-star hotels, dined them at the home of
Unocal VP and medically treated the former foreign minister, Mullah Mohammed
Ghaus before he returned home.

February 12, 1998: Testimony of John J Maresca, vice-president,
international relations, Unocal Corporation was heard by the House Committee
on International Relations and the Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific
regarding "a proposed extension (of the proposed trans-Caspian pipeline)
would link with the SUI pipeline system, moving gas to near New Delhi, where
it would connect with the existing HBJ pipeline..."

June 23, 1998: In a speech to the "Collateral Damage Conference" of the Cato
Institute, Cheney said, "the good Lord didn't see fit to put oil and gas
only where there are democratically elected regimes friendly to the United
States. Occasionally we have to operate in places where, all things
considered, one would not normally choose to go. But, we go where the
business is."

July 29 ,1998: The Department of State is pleased that Turkmen Minister of
Oil and Gas Arazov announced Turkmenistan's selection of the U.S. company
Enron to carry out a feasibility study funded by the Trade and Development
Agency for a trans-Caspian gas pipeline.

August 20, 1998: U.S. Tomahawk cruise missiles target Kandahar Afghanistan
and sites believed to be Osama bin Laden's training camps. Shortly after,
the UN imposes sanctions on Afghanistan that isolate the nation.

January 25, 1999: Human Rights Watch released a report that indicated human
right violations had occurred as a result of opposition to the Dabhol Power
project. Beginning in late 1996 and continuing throughout 1997, leading
Indian environmental activists and representatives of villagers'
organizations in the affected area organized to oppose the project and, as a
direct result of their opposition, were subjected to beatings, repeated
short-term detention and were not paid.

February, 1999: Joint agreement signed by Turkmenistan and two American
companies, Bechtel and GE Capital Services to build a $2.5 billion
trans-Caspian pipeline, after Enron conducted a feasibility study.

November, 1999: Enron purchased 5.1 percent of the company that operates the
country's sole long-distance gas pipeline, which runs from the offshore gas
fields in the Bombay High area to the country's capital, New Delhi.

June-Oct 2000: Maharashtra government allies demand scrapping the project
because of the cost of the power it produces.

Early 2001: Vice President Cheney held several secret meetings with top
Enron officials, including its Chairman Kenneth Lay. These meetings were
presumably part of Cheney's non-public Energy Task Force sessions. A number
of Enron stockholders, including Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Trade
Representative Robert Zoellick, became officials in the Bush administration.
In addition, Thomas White, a former Vice Chairman of Enron and a
multimillionaire in Enron stock, currently serves as the Secretary of the
Army.

February, 2001: Vice President Cheney's energy task force changed a draft
energy proposal to include a provision to boost oil and natural gas
production in India. The amendment was so narrow that it apparently was
targeted only to Enron's power plant in India.

March, 2001: Laila Helms, the part- Afghan niece of the former CIA director
and former U.S. ambassador to Tehran Richard Helms is described as
unofficial Taliban representative in Washington. Ms Helms brought Sayed
Rahmatullah Hashimi, an adviser to Mullah Omar, to Washington.after the
Taliban had destroyed the ancient Buddhas of Bamiyan. Hashimi met the
directorate of Central Intelligence at the CIA and the Bureau of
Intelligence and Research at the State Department.

April, 2001: An Enron memo, which Lay gave Cheney during their one-on-one
meeting, makes eight energy-policy recommendations. Seven out of eight
recommendations were adopted in the administration's final energy plan.

May, 2001: A conference held at the Brookings Institution provides evidence
that the exploitation of Caspian Basin and Asian energy markets was an
urgent priority for the Bush administration, and the centerpiece of its
energy policy

May, 17, 2001: The U.S. indirectly gives $43 million to Afghanistan's
Taliban government as a reward for its efforts to stamp out opium-poppy
cultivation. The same day, White House's energy policy recommended, "the
president direct the Secretaries of State and Energy to work with India's
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to help India maximize its domestic
oil and gas production."

June, 2001: Construction halted on the Dabhol plant.

June, 27, 2001: Cheney stepped in to try to help Enron collect a $64 million
debt from Dabhol. Conducted at a Washington meeting between Cheney and the
leader of India's opposition, Sonia Gandhi.

June 28, 2001: "Good news" a NSC staff member wrote in a e-mail memo: "The
Veep mentioned Enron in his meeting with Sonia Gandhi." An unnamed
government staff member wrote that (s)he would "ask the Indians" if Kenneth
Lay "is invited to the dinner" with India's national security adviser,
Brajesh Mishra. The memo is part of a series uncovered by the Washington
Post that revealed that the National Security Council led a "Dabhol Working
Group."

June 30, 2001: Another Dabhol Working Group memo states the need to "broaden
the advocacy" and recommends diplomatic action by the U.S. Embassy and the
Ambassador. The memo also notes that Christina Rocca, in charge of Central
Asian affairs for the U.S. government, met with a top aide to the Indian
prime minister. The memo is marked as a "Confidential Business
Communication."

August 2, 2001: The last meeting between U.S. and Taliban representatives
took place five weeks before the attacks on New York and Washington, the
analysts maintain. On that occasion, Christina Rocca met the Taliban
ambassador to Pakistan in Islamabad.

August 27, 2001: Kenneth Lay wrote another email to his
employee/stockholders extolling the value of an employee stock option
program, describing a "significantly higher price" the stock would bring in
the near future.

September 5, 2001: Lay announces that the company will divest itself of
$4-$5 billion in assets in the next two years.

September 10, 2001: "Those who control the oil routes out of Central Asia
will impact all future direction and quantities of flow and the distribution
of revenues from new production," wrote energy expert James Dorian in Oil &
Gas Journal, published the day before the terrorist attacks.

September 14, 2001: Unocal issued the following statement: "The company is
not supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan in any way whatsoever. Nor do we
have any project or involvement in Afghanistan." Lay also writes to the
Prime Minister of India, insisting that his $2.3 billion asking price is
reasonable "compared to the size of our legal claim," which Enron placed at
$5 billion. September 19, 2001: Enron invokes a clause in its Dabhol power
plant contract, claiming that because the Maharashtra State Electricity
Board has violated its power purchase agreement, the Maharashtra state
government and the government of India are liable for $5 billion.

October 3, 2001: Cheney meets with India External Affairs Minister Jaswant
Singh. The NSC sends "Dabhol talking points" to Cheney's staff.

November 1, 2001: Bush signed Executive Order 13233 which limits public
access to papers of all presidents since 1980 ? including George W. Bush.
Another memo written this day states that talking points for Bush were
prepared for his meeting with the India Prime Minister. Bush did not discuss
Enron during the meeting.

November 6, 2001: OPIC President Peter Watson contacts a top aide of the
Indian Prime Minister: "The acute lack of progress in this matter has forced
Dabhol to rise to the highest levels of the United States government."

November 8, 2001: Enron president Lawrence "Greg" Whalley called Treasury
Undersecretary Peter Fisher in late October and disclosed that it had
overstated earnings dating back to 1997 by almost $600 million. That same
day, an e-mail ("Importance: High"), whose sender and recipient are blacked
out, warned, "President Bush cannot talk about Dabhol."

November 9, 2001: An e-mail noted that Lawrence Lindsey, chairman of Bush's
National Economic Council, had met India's National Security Adviser Brajesh
Mishra on Nov. 7, but it said Lindsey was "advised that he could not discuss
Dabhol." Lindsey is a former Enron consultant and had served on its board of
advisers.

Late November, 2001: Lay called Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and Commerce
Secretary Don Evans seeking a last-minute federal bailout and was turned
down.

December 2, 2001: Enron files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

December 27, 2001: Bush Administration repealed a Clinton-era rule that
prevents the government from awarding federal contracts to businesses that
have broken environmental, labor, tax, civil rights or other laws.

December 31, 2001: President Bush appointed a former aide to Unocal,
Afghan-born Zalmay Khalilzad, as special envoy to Afghanistan. The
nomination was announced nine days after the US-backed interim government of
Hamid Karzai took office in Kabul.

January 17, 2002: Enron reportedly filed an approximately $200 million claim
with the U.S. government's Overseas Private Investment Corporation in an
attempt to recoup losses from the Dabhol Power Corporation.

January 18, 2002: According to documents released on this date, it was noted
the Bush administration intervened with top Indian officials last year in a
bid to salvage the Enron project in India. The White House said the effort,
involving Vice President Dick Cheney and other senior officials, was
justified because the $2.9 billion Dabhol power project was financed in part
through the U.S. government's Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(OPIC), a taxpayer-backed agency that provides "political risk" insurance
and loans to help U.S. companies invest in developing nations. The White
House denied the push was influenced by Enron's political contributions.

January 28, 2002: U.S. Ambassador Robert Blackwell addresses an Indian
energy industry meeting and demands India honor the "sanctity of contract"
and make good on the Enron debt, warning that India's hopes for "big-time
international investment" could be harmed otherwise.

February 8, 2002: Afghanistan's interim leader Hamid Karzai said he and
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf had agreed to revive a plan for a
trans-Caspian gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan.

February 9, 2002: Turkmenistan hopes the fragile peace in neighboring
Afghanistan will allow work to resume on the natural gas pipeline connecting
to Pakistan.

February 20, 2002: OPIC reveals that it gave Enron $554 million in loans and
$204 million in insurance. Congress also learns the the Export-Import Bank
loaned $675 million to Enron and associated companies.

February 22, 2002: The GAO sues Cheney for refusing to reveal details of his
meetings with Enron officials.

[Jannuzi's note: actually the suit is larger than that and duplicates one
brought by an environmental group last year invoking FIA, still pending ;
they want to see all the notes of who met with the Cheney group and what
they advised it in writing up the energy plan for the US published last
spring. The potential scandal goes well beyond Enron, since the energy
advisers list looks like a who's who of energy wasters and polluters. One
advising think tank on energy and the environment has both the CEO of Enron
and a Carlyle Group executive on it].

It is the first time that the agency has sued a member of the executive
branch of government.




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