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Cheney Made
Millions Off Oil Deals with Hussein
by Martin A. Lee
San
Francisco Bay Guardian
November
13, 2000
Here's a whopper of a story you may have
missed amid the cacophony of campaign ads and stump speeches in the run-
up to the elections.
During former defense secretary
Richard Cheney's five-year tenure as chief executive of Halliburton, Inc.,
his oil services firm raked in big bucks from dubious commercial dealings
with Iraq. Cheney left Halliburton with a $34 million retirement package
last July when he became the GOP's vice-presidential candidate.

Of course, U.S. firms aren't
generally supposed to do business with Saddam Hussein. But thanks to legal
loopholes large enough to steer an oil tanker through, Halliburton
profited big-time from deals with the Iraqi dictatorship. Conducted
discreetly through several Halliburton subsidiaries in Europe, these
greasy transactions helped Saddam Hussein retain his grip on power while
lining the pockets of Cheney and company.

According to the Financial
Times of London, between September 1998 and last winter, Cheney, as CEO of
Halliburton, oversaw $23.8 million of business contracts for the sale of
oil-industry equipment and services to Iraq through two of its
subsidiaries, Dresser Rand and Ingersoll-Dresser Pump, which helped
rebuild Iraq's war-damaged petroleum-production infrastructure. The
combined value of these contracts exceeded those of any other U.S. company
doing business with Baghdad.
Halliburton was among more than
a dozen American firms that supplied Iraq's petroleum industry with spare
parts and retooled its oil rigs when U.N. sanctions were eased in 1998.
Cheney's company utilized subsidiaries in France, Italy, Germany, and
Austria so as not to draw undue attention to controversial business
arrangements that might embarrass Washington and jeopardize lucrative ties
to Iraq, which will pump $24 billion of petrol under the U.N.-administered
oil-for-food program this year. Assisted by Halliburton, Hussein's
government will earn another $1 billion by illegally exporting oil through
black-market channels.
With Cheney at the helm since
1995, Halliburton quickly grew into America's number-one oil-services
company, the fifth-largest military contractor, and the biggest nonunion
employer in the nation. Although Cheney claimed that the U.S. government
"had absolutely nothing to do" with his firm's meteoric financial success,
State Department documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times indicate that
U.S. officials helped Halliburton secure major contracts in Asia and
Africa. Halliburton now does business in 130 countries and employs more
than 100,000 workers worldwide.
Its 1999 income was a cool $15
billion.
In addition to Iraq,
Halliburton counts among its business partners several brutal
dictatorships that have committed egregious human rights abuses, including
the hated military regime in Burma (Myanmar).
EarthRights, a Washington,
D.C.-based human rights watchdog, condemned Halliburton for two
energy-pipeline projects in Burma that led to the forced relocation of
villages, rape, murder, indentured labor, and other crimes against
humanity.
A full report (this is a 45
page pdf file - there is also a brief summary) on the Burma connection,
"Halliburton's Destructive Engagement," can be accessed on EarthRights'
Web site
Human rights activists have
also criticized Cheney's company for its questionable role in Algeria,
Angola, Bosnia, Croatia, Haiti, Rwanda, Somalia, Indonesia, and other
volatile trouble spots. In Russia, Halliburton's partner, Tyumen Oil, has
been accused of committing massive fraud to gain control of a Siberian oil
field.
And in oil-rich Nigeria,
Halliburton worked with Shell and Chevron, which were implicated in gross
human rights violations and environmental calamities in that country.
Indeed, Cheney's firm increased its involvement in the Niger Delta after
the military government executed several ecology activists and crushed
popular protests against the oil industry.
Halliburton also had business
dealings in Iran and Libya, which remain on the State Department's list of
terrorist states. Brown and Root, a Halliburton subsidiary, was fined $3.8
million for reexporting U.S. goods to Libya in violation of U.S.
sanctions.
But in terms of sheer
hypocrisy, Halliburton's relationship with Saddam Hussein is hard to top.
What's more, Cheney lied about his company's activities in Iraq when
journalists fleetingly raised the issue during the campaign.
Questioned by Sam Donaldson on
ABC's This Week program in August, Cheney bluntly asserted that
Halliburton had no dealings with the Iraqi regime while he was on board.
Donaldson: I'm told, and
correct me if I'm wrong, that Halliburton, through subsidiaries, was
actually trying to do business in Iraq?
Cheney: No. No. I had a firm
policy that I wouldn't do anything in Iraq even arrangements that were
supposedly legal.
And that was it! ABC News and
the other U.S. networks dropped the issue like a hot potato. As damning
information about Halliburton surfaced in the European press, American
reporters stuck to old routines and took their cues on how to cover the
campaign from the two main political parties, both of which had very
little to say about official U.S. support for abusive corporate policies
at home and abroad.
But why, in this instance,
didn't the Democrats stomp and scream about Cheney's Iraq connection? The
Gore campaign undoubtedly knew of Halliburton's smarmy business dealings
from the get-go.
Gore and Lieberman could have
made hay about how the wannabe GOP veep had been in cahoots with Saddam.
Such explosive revelations may well have swayed voters and boosted Gore's
chances in what was shaping up to be a close electoral contest.
The Democratic standard-bearers
dropped the ball in part because Halliburton's conduct was generally in
accordance with the foreign policy of the Clinton administration. Cheney
is certainly not the only Washington mover and shaker to have been
affiliated with a company trading in Iraq. Former CIA Director John
Deutsch, who served in a Democratic administration, is a member of the
board of directors of Schlumberger, the second-largest U.S. oil-services
company, which also does business through subsidiaries in Iraq.
Despite occasional rhetorical
skirmishes, a bipartisan foreign-policy consensus prevails on Capital
Hill, where the commitment to human rights, with a few notable exceptions,
is about as deep as an oil slick.
Truth be told, trading with the
enemy is a time-honored American corporate practice or perhaps
"malpractice" would be a more appropriate description of big-business ties
to repressive regimes.
Given that Saddam Hussein, the
pariah du jour, has often been compared to Hitler, it's worth pointing out
that several blue-chip U.S. firms profited from extensive commercial
dealings with Nazi Germany.
Shockingly, some American
companies =96 including Standard Oil, Ford, ITT, GM, and General Electric
secretly kept trading with the Nazi enemy while American soldiers fought
and died during World War II.
Today General Electric is among
the companies that are back in business with Saddam Hussein, even as
American jets and battleships attack Iraq on a weekly basis using weapons
made by G.E. But the United Nations sanctions committee, dominated by U.S.
officials, has routinely blocked medicines and other essential items from
being delivered to Iraq through the oil-for-food program, claiming they
have a potential military "dual use." These sanctions have taken a
terrible toll on ordinary Iraqis, and on children in particular, while the
likes of Halliburton and G.E. continue to lubricate their coffers.
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