New York Times
OP-ED COLUMNIST
Scandal at the U.N.
By WILLIAM SAFIRE
March 17, 2004

The cover-up in the office of the U.N. secretary general of a
multibillion-dollar financial fraud known as the Iraqi oil-for-food
program is beginning to come apart.

The scandal has been brewing for years. The first I learned of it was in a
New York Times Op-Ed article last April by the journalist Claudia Rosett
charging that the U.N.'s secretive oversight of more than $100 billion in
Iraqi oil exports and supposed humanitarian imports was "an invitation to
kickbacks, political back-scratching and smuggling done under cover of
relief operations."

After checking with Kurdish sources in Iraq, I reported that half the money
allocated to their people had been blocked by Saddam "conspiring with
bureaucrats in the U.N. Plaza."

Kofi Annan's right-hand man, Benon Sevan, had been named by the secretary
general to head the oil-for-food program and report directly to him. Though
he could not deny a favored French banking connection, Sevan branded as
"inaccuracies" charges by Ms. Rosett and me of secrecy, citing a hundred
audits in five years. But he refused to make public what companies in what
countries got Saddam's largess.

Now, thanks to evidence of systematic thievery on a huge scale, discovered
by free Iraqis in Baghdad, the whole rotten mess of 10 percent kickbacks on
billions in contracts is coming to light. In detailed accounts, Susan Sachs
in The Times, Therese Raphael in The Wall Street Journal, and Charles
Laurence and Inigo Gilmore of London's Daily Telegraph have flipped over the
flat rock of corruption.

Assistant Secretary General Sevan, now on an extended vacation until his
retirement next month, denied through a spokesman "that I had received oil
or oil monies from the former Iraqi regime" and demanded that his doubters
produce documentary evidence. The Journal then produced a document in Arabic
that suggests Sevan received an allocation of 1.8 million barrels of oil.

Under the U.N. bureaucracy's nose--and I suspect, in some cases, with its
collusion--nearly three-quarters of the suppliers jacked up their prices to
pay the 10 percent kickback. These included European manufacturers, Arab
trade brokers, Russian factories and Chinese state-owned companies.
Corruption's take--out of the mouths of hungry Iraqi children--was estimated
by Sachs of The Times at $2.3 billion.

Hired by the U.N. to monitor these imports was a Swiss-based firm, Cotecna,
which was paid out of the exorbitant fee the U.N. charged for overhead. Ms.
Rosett, writing in National Review last week, notes that Kojo Annan, the
secretary general's son, was once on staff and later a consultant to that
tight-lipped company. In denying to The Telegraph in 1999 that he worked on
the U.N. oil-for-food account, Kojo Annan said, "The decision is made by the
contracts committee, not by Kofi Annan."

About that "661 compliance committee," on which the U.S. has a seat and to
which the secretary general now wants to pass the buck: a U.S. official
familiar with its operation tells me that "its purpose was formally to
approve what the U.N. staff recommended. Only the U.S. and the U.K. experts
ever put a hold on a contract, and that about items that had dual use in
weaponry. Few U.S. firms got contracts, and those that did worked through
middlemen to avoid the General Accounting Office."

Annan's office kept blaming the 661 committee and stonewalling the press
until an irate Iraqi Governing Council hired the accountants KPMG and a law
firm to investigate what its advisers told Annan was "one of the world's
most disgraceful scams."

Under mounting pressure, this week the U.N. let it be known that its
laughably titled Office of Internal Oversight Services would look into the
matter. An internal whitewash? Not nearly good enough.

Will the Security Council appoint an independent counsel to clean house in
an inept or corrupt Secretariat? No, because France and Russia had their
hands in the kickback till.

But free Iraq, backed up by the U.S., is not helpless. Our Congress supplies
22 percent of the U.N. budget, and we have a right to an accounting.
Chairman Henry Hyde, of House International Relations, calls this "an
outrage" and will arrange for a G.A.O. briefing this week, to be followed by
open hearings in April.

The U.N. can redeem its sullied reputation by helping to shape Iraq's
future. To take up that challenge, it must have clean hands.

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to