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Troubles for the prince of darkness at World Bank

 
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Apr, 2007 07:02 pm
It does seem to be the kiss of death to have President Bush declare his confidence in someone.

Brownie, anyone?
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Apr, 2007 09:22 pm
I was startled just today by hearing Bush say something I agree with, re the action, which was self sacrifice of the professor who survived the holocaust, at the VT scene.

But, yeah, ehBeth, he'd generally do better by being mysterious.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Apr, 2007 04:36 am
As this piece details, the folks at the world bank are referring to Wolfowitz's lady as "the neoconcubine".

Look at these other details:
Quote:
- Back in 2003, Wolfowitz had taken care of Riza by directing his trusted Pentagon deputy, Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith -- who had been in charge of the Office of Special Plans and had been Wolfowitz's partner in managing the CPA -- to arrange for a military contract for her from Science Applications International Corp. When the contract was exposed this week, SAIC issued a statement that it "had no role in the selection of the personnel." In other words, the firm with hundreds of millions in contracts at stake had been ordered to hire Riza.

- Riza was unhappy about leaving the sinecure at the World Bank. But in 2006 Wolfowitz made a series of calls to his friends that landed her a job at a new think tank called Foundation for the Future that is funded by the State Department. She was the sole employee, at least in the beginning. The World Bank continued to pay her salary, which was raised from $60,000 to $193,590 annually, more than the $183,500 paid to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and all of it tax-free. Moreover, Wolfowitz got the State Department to agree that the ratings of her performance would automatically be "outstanding." Wolfowitz insisted on these terms himself and then misled the World Bank board about what he had done.

- Exactly how this deal was made and with whom remains something of a mystery. The person who did work with Riza in her new position was Elizabeth Cheney, then the deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs. And Riza's assignment fell under the purview of Karen Hughes, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. But these facts raise more questions than they answer.

more here http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/04/19/wolfowitz/
0 Replies
 
DontTreadOnMe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Apr, 2007 12:18 pm
liz cheney?

this isn't simple nepotism, it's flat out inbreeding.
0 Replies
 
kickycan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Apr, 2007 01:33 pm
blueflame1 wrote:
Top deputy tells Wolfowitz to step down- sources
Wed Apr 18, 2007 9:57 PM BST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A deputy to Paul Wolfowitz told the World Bank chief on Wednesday to resign in the interests of the institution during a meeting of the bank's management, sources who participated in the meeting said.

The sources told Reuters that World Bank Managing Director Graeme Wheeler, a bank veteran who was appointed by Wolfowitz as one of his two deputies a year ago, raised the issue at a meeting of the bank's vice presidents.

Asked to comment, World Bank spokesman Marwan Muasher said: "I feel it is inappropriate to comment on private meetings."


And what will the consequences be? Probably nothing.

Silly deputy. Consequences are for citizens!
0 Replies
 
blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Apr, 2007 02:30 pm
It takes 85% of the board to vote Wolfie out. The USA controls 16.4 % of the votes and Bushie is standing by his man. Should Wolfie get canned it would be shock & awe. link
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2007 03:59 am
DontTreadOnMe wrote:
liz cheney?

this isn't simple nepotism, it's flat out inbreeding.

I gather you noted Karen Hughes' name in there too.

And guess who turns up as Riza's lawyer?

Quote:
Ms. Riza's lawyer, Victoria Toensing, did not respond to a request for a comment.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/20/washington/20wolfowitz.html?hp
0 Replies
 
blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2007 10:33 am
US eyes Afghan to replace bank boss
Gabriel Rozenberg, London
April 21, 2007

THE future of World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz was in further jeopardy yesterday after it emerged the White House was drawing up a list of candidates to succeed him.
The most prominent potential replacement is Ashraf Ghani, credited with overhauling the economy of Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US.

Such an appointment would mark the first time a non-American has held the position in the 60-year history of the global bank.

Senior officials in the US administration have noted that the White House is softening its support for Mr Wolfowitz, President George W.Bush's former deputy defence secretary.

They pointed yesterday to the silence of the Treasury Department and Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary, as a sign of the administration's attempt to distance itself from the man it parachuted into the job in 2005.

Mr Wolfowitz appeared yesterday before a meeting of the World Bank's 24-nation board, which is investigating whether he broke rules in arranging a high-paying job for his lover, Shaha Riza, in 2005.

The meeting of the executive board is continuing, but the pressure on Mr Wolfowitz is being felt in the bank.

"People feel paralysed," one official told The New York Times. "No one is doing any work at all. This genie can never go back to the bottle."
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21594109-2703,00.html
0 Replies
 
DontTreadOnMe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2007 03:11 pm
blatham wrote:
DontTreadOnMe wrote:
liz cheney?

this isn't simple nepotism, it's flat out inbreeding.

I gather you noted Karen Hughes' name in there too.

And guess who turns up as Riza's lawyer?

yup.

Quote:
Ms. Riza's lawyer, Victoria Toensing,...


oh, brother... the torture never stops around here.
0 Replies
 
Cycloptichorn
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2007 09:22 pm
Oh, this is getting so much juicier. It may take over as my current favorite Neocon scandal.

Quote:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/04/19/wolfowitz/print.html

Wolfowitz's girlfriend problem

Not only did the World Bank president find his companion Shaha Ali Riza a cushy job in the State Department, but she received a security clearance -- unprecedented for a foreign national.

By Sidney Blumenthal

Apr. 19, 2007 | Paul Wolfowitz's tenure as president of the World Bank has turned into yet another case study of neoconservative government in action. It bears resemblance to the military planning for the invasion of Iraq, during which Wolfowitz, as deputy secretary of defense, arrogantly humiliated Army chief of staff Eric Shinseki for suggesting that the U.S. force level was inadequate. It has similarities to the twisting of intelligence used to justify the war, in which Wolfowitz oversaw the construction of a parallel operation within the Pentagon, the Office of Special Plans, to shunt disinformation directly to the White House, without its being vetted by CIA analysts, about Saddam Hussein's alleged ties to al-Qaida and his weapons of mass destruction, and sought to fire Mohamed ElBaradei, director of the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency, for factually reporting before the invasion that Saddam had not revived his nuclear weapons program. Wolfowitz's regime also uncannily looks like the occupation of Iraq run by the Coalition Provisional Authority, from which Wolfowitz blackballed State Department professionals -- instead staffing it with inexperienced ideologues -- and to whom Wolfowitz sent daily orders.

Wolfowitz's World Bank scandal over his girlfriend reveals many of the same qualities that created the wreckage he left in his wake in Iraq: grandiosity, cronyism, self-dealing and lying -- followed by an energetic campaign to deflect accountability. As with the war, he has retreated behind his fervent profession of good intentions to excuse himself. The ginning up of the conservative propaganda mill that once disseminated Wolfowitz's disinformation on WMD to defend him as the innocent victim of a political smear only underlines his tried-and-true methods of operation. The hollowness of his defense echoes in the thunderous absurdity of Monday's Wall Street Journal editorial: "Paul Wolfowitz, meet the Duke lacrosse team."

Superficially, Wolfowitz's arrangement for his girlfriend of a job with a hefty increase in pay in violation of the ethics clauses of his contract and without informing the World Bank board might seem like an all-too-familiar story of a man seeking special favors for a romantic partner. Wolfowitz has tried to cast the scandal as a "painful personal dilemma," as he described it in an April 12 e-mail to outraged employees of the World Bank, who have taken to calling the neoconservative's girlfriend his "neoconcubine." He was, he says, just attempting to "navigate in uncharted waters." But the fall of Wolfowitz is the final act of a long drama -- and love or even self-love may not be the whole subject.

Wolfowitz's girlfriend, Shaha Ali Riza, is a Libyan, raised in Saudi Arabia, educated at Oxford, who now has British citizenship. She is divorced; he is separated. Their discreet relationship became a problem only when he ascended to the World Bank presidency. Riza had floated through the neoconservative network -- working at the Free Iraq Foundation in the early 1990s and the National Endowment for Democracy -- until landing a position in the Middle East and African department of the World Bank. The ethics provisions of Wolfowitz's contract, however, stipulated that he could not maintain a sexual relationship with anyone over whom he had supervisory authority, even indirectly.

Back in 2003, Wolfowitz had taken care of Riza by directing his trusted Pentagon deputy, Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith -- who had been in charge of the Office of Special Plans and had been Wolfowitz's partner in managing the CPA -- to arrange for a military contract for her from Science Applications International Corp. When the contract was exposed this week, SAIC issued a statement that it "had no role in the selection of the personnel." In other words, the firm with hundreds of millions in contracts at stake had been ordered to hire Riza.

Riza was unhappy about leaving the sinecure at the World Bank. But in 2006 Wolfowitz made a series of calls to his friends that landed her a job at a new think tank called Foundation for the Future that is funded by the State Department. She was the sole employee, at least in the beginning. The World Bank continued to pay her salary, which was raised by $60,000 to $193,590 annually, more than the $183,500 paid to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and all of it tax-free. Moreover, Wolfowitz got the State Department to agree that the ratings of her performance would automatically be "outstanding." Wolfowitz insisted on these terms himself and then misled the World Bank board about what he had done.


Exactly how this deal was made and with whom remains something of a mystery. The person who did work with Riza in her new position was Elizabeth Cheney, then the deputy assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs. And Riza's assignment fell under the purview of Karen Hughes, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. But these facts raise more questions than they answer.

The documents released by the World Bank do not include any of the communications with the State Department. How did Elizabeth Cheney come to be involved? Did Wolfowitz speak with Vice President Dick Cheney, for whom he had been a deputy when Cheney was secretary of defense in the elder Bush's administration?

Riza, who is not a U.S. citizen, had to receive a security clearance in order to work at the State Department. Who intervened? It is not unusual to have British or French midlevel officers at the department on exchange programs, but they receive security clearances based on the clearances they already have with their host governments. Granting a foreign national who is detailed from an international organization a security clearance, however, is extraordinary, even unprecedented. So how could this clearance have been granted?

State Department officials familiar with the details of this matter confirmed to me that Shaha Ali Riza was detailed to the State Department and had unescorted access while working for Elizabeth Cheney. Access to the building requires a national security clearance or permanent escort by a person with such a clearance. But the State Department has no record of having issued a national security clearance to Riza.

State Department officials believe that Riza was issued such a clearance by the Defense Department after SAIC was forced by Wolfowitz and Feith to hire her. Then her clearance would have been recognized by the State Department through a credentials transmittal letter and Riza would have accessed the State Department on Pentagon credentials, using her Pentagon clearance to get a State Department building pass with a letter issued under instructions from Liz Cheney.

But State Department officials tell me that no such letter can be confirmed as received. And the officials stress that the department would never issue a clearance to a non-U.S. citizen as part of a contractual requisition. Issuing a national security clearance to a foreign national under instructions from a Pentagon official would constitute a violation of the executive orders governing clearances, they say.

Given these circumstances, the inspector general of the Defense Department should be ordered to investigate how Shaha Ali Riza was issued a Pentagon security clearance. And the inspector general of the State Department should investigate who ordered Riza's building pass and whether there was a Pentagon credentials transmittal letter.

Wolfowitz's willful behavior, as though no rules bound him or facts constrained his ideas, should not have surprised anyone. At the Pentagon, Wolfowitz was an insistent force behind an invasion of Iraq, bringing it up at the first National Security Council meeting of the Bush administration, months before Sept. 11. For years he had been a firm believer in the crackpot theories of Laurie Mylroie, a neoconservative writer, who argued that Saddam was behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and even the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. After Sept. 11, Wolfowitz pursued his obsession by sending former CIA Director James Woolsey on a secret mission to attempt to confirm the theory. Woolsey came back with nothing, but Wolfowitz continued to believe. His beliefs are stronger than any evidence.

Surrounded by his Praetorian Guard, Wolfowitz insulated himself at the World Bank from the career staff. There, as at the Pentagon, Wolfowitz pushed aside the professionals and replaced them with a small band of politically reliable assistants. Wolfowitz rewarded them, too, on his own authority, with enormous tax-free salaries. Consider Kevin Kellems, his public affairs officer at the Pentagon, who had guided conservative media from that perch and is known as "keeper of the comb," for having been the person to hand Wolfowitz the infamous comb he licked before slicking down his hair in the Michael Moore film "Fahrenheit 9/11." Kellems was given a salary of $240,000, at least equal to what World Bank vice presidents with years of service earn.

Wolfowitz had spent his career staging neoconservative insurgencies against what he considered to be liberal establishments. But at the World Bank he tried to model himself after Robert McNamara, who had turned his presidency at the bank into his vehicle for redemption for his part in the Vietnam War. Wolfowitz, the chief intellectual and policy advocate for the Iraq war, no longer mentioned it. Now he pleads to the World Bank board that his corrupt dealings be overlooked for the greater good of his crusade against corruption. His refusal to resign discredits and paralyzes the institution he had hoped would vindicate him.

-- By Sidney Blumenthal


Cycloptichorn
0 Replies
 
DontTreadOnMe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 21 Apr, 2007 07:31 pm
this am. saw a little bit about this and the large scale recruitment to justice from the robertson/falwell schools.

finally, could the media be pulling the tail from between their legs ?

nawww... that's too much to ask for.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Wed 25 Apr, 2007 04:46 am
Quote:
Yet another reason to fire Paul Wolfowitz
The Financial Times is turning into Paul Wolfowitz's worst nightmare. No other paper has hounded him as relentlessly. Just a few hours ago, the paper published its latest broadside. Juan José Daboub, the same Wolfowitz-appointed deputy who was already being accused of ordering the removal of family planning references from a strategic aid plan for Madagascar, is now said to have attempted to water down references to climate change in a World Bank environmental strategy paper.

The accusation is coming directly from the World Bank's chief scientist, Robert Watson:


[Watson] said Mr Daboub tried to dilute references to climate change in the Clean Energy Investment Framework, a key strategy paper presented to the bank's shareholder governments at its annual meeting in Singapore last September.

"He tried to water it down. He tried to take out references to climate change," Mr Watson said. Two other officials confirmed this account.

The chief scientist said Mr Daboub, who oversees the sustainable development division, tried to remove some references to climate change completely and, in other cases, replace them with the phrases "climate risk" and "climate variability," which convey greater uncertainty over the human impact on climate.
http://www.salon.com/tech/htww/?last_story=/tech/htww/2007/04/24/wolfowitz2/
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Apr, 2007 06:29 am
Quote:
Wolfowitz tried to cover his tracks over lover's job
By Robert Verkaik and Mary Fitzgerald
Published: 29 April 2007

The president of the World Bank, Paul Wolfowitz, tried to cover his tracks after approving a promotion and substantial pay rise for his girlfriend, it has emerged.

Documents released by the bank's ethics committee show that Mr Wolfowitz, controversially appointed to the World Bank from the Pentagon, where he was a leading architect of the Iraq war, tried to limit access to employee salary information after the bank launched an inquiry into the affair.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/article2494250.ece

What is it with these people? This sense of entitlement, this assumption that rules and integrity and honesty are applicable only to the little people?
0 Replies
 
 

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