National Review Online
March 10, 2004, 6:19 p.m.
Kojo & Kofi
Unbelievable U.N. stories.
By Claudia Rosett

In the growing scandal over the United Nations Oil-for-Food program, which
from 1996-2003 supervised relief to Saddam Hussein's Iraq, U.N. Secretary
General Kofi Annan and his staff have excused themselves from any
responsibility for the massive corruption involving billions in bribes and
kickbacks that went on via more than $100 billion in U.N.-approved contracts
for Saddam to sell oil and buy humanitarian supplies. U.N. officials have
denied that this tidal wave of graft in any way seeped into their own shop,
or that they even had time to notice it was out there. They were too busy
making the world a better place.

That's fascinating, not least given the ties of Annan's own son, Kojo Annan,
to the Switzerland-based firm, Cotecna, which from 1999 onward worked on
contract for the U.N. monitoring the shipments of Oil-for-food supplies into
Iraq. These were the same supplies sent in under terms of those tens of
billions of dollars worth of U.N.-approved contracts in which the U.N. says
it failed to notice Saddam Hussein's widespread arrangements to overpay
contractors who then shipped overpriced goods to the impoverished people of
Iraq and kicked back part of their profits to Saddam's regime.

Cotecna was hired by the U.N. on December 31, 1998. Shortly afterward, press
reports surfaced that Kojo was a partner in a private consulting firm doing
work for Cotecna, and that just 13 months previously he had occupied a
senior slot on Cotecna's own staff. Asked about this in 1999 by the London
Telegraph, a U.N. spokesman, John Mills, replied that the U.N. had not been
aware of the connection, and that "The tender by Cotecna was the lowest by a
significant margin."

It seems there's a lot the U.N. managed not to be aware of. But the
information that Cotecna - while employing Kofi's son in any capacity - put
in the lowest bid by far for the job of authenticating Saddam's Oil-for-Food

imports, is not necessarily reassuring. Cotecna, which got paid roughly $6
million for its services during that first year (the U.N. will not release
figures on Cotecna's fees over the following years) was bidding on work that
empowered its staff to inspect tens of billions worth of supplies inbound to
a regime much interested in smuggling, and evidently accustomed to dealing
in bribes and kickbacks as a routine part of business. The issue was never
solely whether the monitors were cheap, but whether they were trustworthy.

The whole setup raises disturbing questions. But this is a subject on which
neither the U.N. nor Cotecna has been willing to offer illumination. Asked
for details, both have stonewalled. The U.N. spokesman Mills, who fielded
the question in 1999, is now deceased. A query to the U.N. Oil-for-Food
elicits from a spokesman only the information that the five-year-old
response by the late Mills "stands, as provided by the U.N." A recent query
to Cotecna, asking for at least some detail on ties to Kojo Annan, elicits
nothing beyond the reply that: "There is nothing else to add."

It is possible of course, that Kojo Annan had nothing to do with the Iraq
program per se, as he told the Telegraph back in 1999: "I would never play
any role in anything that involves the United Nations for obvious reasons."
Though at the same time, in a comment that suggested at least nodding
acquaintance with the Oil-for-Food program, Kojo added: "The decision is
made by the contracts committee, not by Kofi Annan."

Then why the reluctance from the U.N., or Cotecna, for that matter, to
provide any further details whatsoever? Beyond that, it is disingenuous to
suggest Annan had no responsibility for the contracts. Oil-for-Food was run
out of the U.N. Secretariat, reporting directly to Annan, who regularly
signed off on the six-month phases of the program. Without his approval, the
contracts would not have gone forward.

Even if we assume that everyone on the U.N.'s Oil-for-Food staff, as well as
Kofi Annan himself, was indeed ignorant of Kojo Annan's involvement with
Cotecna, it is hard to buy the argument that Kofi, while signing off
regularly on the program's workings, was simply oblivious to the details.
Not only was Kofi Annan the boss, but he was directly involved from the
beginning. Kofi Annan's official U.N. biography notes that shortly before
his promotion to Secretary-General "he led the first United Nations team
negotiating with Iraq on the sale of oil to fund purchases of humanitarian
aid."

It was Annan, who in October 1997 brought in as Oil-for-Food's executive
director Benon Sevan, reporting directly to the Secretary-General, to
consolidate Oil-for-Food's operations into the Office of Iraq Program. And
it was shortly after Sevan took charge that Oil-for-Food, set up by Kofi
Annan's predecessor, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, with at least some transparency
on individual deals, began treating as confidential such vital information
as the names of specific contractors, quantities of goods, and prices paid.

U.N. staff, such as Under-Secretary General Shashi Tharoor in a letter last
month to the Wall Street Journal, have argued that the U.N. was not
responsible for Saddam's misdeeds, and that U.N. staff were not concerned
with such kickback-relevant matters as business terms of Saddam's contracts.
The disturbing implication is that the U.N. - while collecting a commission
of more than $1 billion on Saddam's oil sales to cover its own overhead in
administering Oil-for-Food - was indifferent to Saddam's short-changing the
Iraqi people, whose relief was supposed to be the entire point of the
program.

Beyond that, the U.N., during the final months of Oil-for-Food, gave every
indication of knowing just where the problems lay. Last May, shortly after
the fall of Saddam's regime, the U.N. Security Council voted to end the
Oil-for-Food program and gave the U.N. Secretariat six months to tie-up
loose ends before handing over any outstanding import contracts to the U.S.
Coalition Provisional Authority. With Saddam's regime gone as a contracting
party, the U.N. began a frenzied process of "renegotiating" billions in
contracts, basically winnowing out the graft component that Oil-for-Food had
previously approved.

By the end of this sudden housecleaning, the U.N. had scrapped more than 25
percent of the contracts for which, under Saddam, it had already agreed to
release funding from the U.N.-controlled Oil-for-Food bank accounts.

Uncharacteristically, the U.N. on its website has posted explanatory notes
next to some of the dropped contracts. These do not suggest a U.N. that was
living in ignorance of Saddam's the 10-percent-overpricing-and-kickback
scheme.

For instance, in the U.N.'s own footnotes, there is reference to the
welding-machine contractor from Lebanon, "unwilling to accept the 10%
deduction"; likewise the Belgian and Jordanian suppliers of medicine, both
refusing a "10% reduction." In other cases there is a vaguer note, such as
the Russian backhoe supplier, who "refused to accept extra fee deduction."
Or the supplier of "fork lift and spares" from Belarus who "stated that the
supply of remaining parts cannot be cost effective under the current
circumstances." Asked to further explain these notations, an Oil-for-Food
spokesman offers no comment except that all available information is already
posted on the U.N. website.

Altogether, according to U.N. records, 728 previously approved and funded
deals were "removed from the list of amendable contracts," a few because the
supplies had already been delivered, but many because the contractors appear
to have run for the hills. For instance, there's the Jordanian supplier of
school furniture, whose contract was dropped during the U.N.'s post-Saddam
frenzy of "prioritization" because the "Company does not exist and the
person in charge moved to Egypt." Or the Russian supplier of "vehicle spare
parts," who "could not be contacted despite all efforts." Or the Algerian
seller of "adult milk" who "has no interest in renegotiation"; the Egyptian
seller of "generator" for educational purposes, who "is not enthusiastic
about proceeding with the amendment"; the Syrian seller of "laboratory
equipment" who is "not possible to contact."

Another 762 contracts set aside indefinitely by the U.N., post-Saddam
because of their "questionable utility" were deals for goods that sound
handy and humanitarian enough on the generic U.N. face of it. These include
medicine from China; sugar and ambulances from Egypt; laboratory materials
and medical equipment from France; educational materials from Pakistan;
wheat, medical equipment, and ambulances from Russia; and yet more wheat,
from Saudi Arabia. One has to wonder if the revised assessment of utility
lay in the nature of the goods described, or in the actual terms of the
contracts previously blessed by the U.N.

It's commendable that the U.N., facing imminent handover of the program,
tried to clean up the remaining contracts. It is plausible, perhaps, that no
one at the U.N. knew of the links between Kofi Annan's son, Kojo, and the
firm monitoring Iraq's U.N.-approved imports, Cotecna, and that these ties
had no bearing on a massively corrupt program. It is possible that only
after Saddam fell did anyone among the 1,000 or so U.N. international staff
administering Oil-for-Food, or Sevan, or Kofi Annan, notice that they'd been
approving Saddam's deals with suppliers that were, in various combinations
paying kickbacks, hard to contact, or even, as in the case of the Jordanian
school-furniture contractor, nonexistent.

But what has to be clear by now is that the U.N. itself was either corrupt,
or so stunningly incompetent as to require total overhaul. There are by now
enough questions, there has been enough secrecy, stonewalling, and rising
evidence of graft all around the U.N. program in Iraq, so that it is surely
worth an independent investigation into the U.N. itself - and Annan's role
in supervising this program. If Kofi Annan will not exercise his authority
to set a truly independent inquiry in motion, it is way past time for the
U.S., whose taxpayers supply about a quarter of the U.N. budget, to call the
U.N. itself to account for Oil-for-Food - in dollar terms the biggest relief
operation it has ever run, and by many signs, one of the dirtiest.

Claudia Rosett is a senior fellow with the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies, and an adjunct fellow with the Hudson Institute.


Reply via email to