martha rosler on Thu, 11 Jul 2002 22:10:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] MoveOn.org: Who is Dick Cheney? |
Date: 11 Jul 2002 19:51:38 -0000 >From: "Wes Boyd, MoveOn.org" >To: "martha rosler" <navva@earthlink.net> >Subject: Our first bulletin: Who is Dick Cheney? > > Dear friend of MoveOn, <snip> > You can subscribe to the bulletin simply by clicking on the link below: <http://www.moveon.org/subscrip/one.mhtml?list_id=103&id=645-660726-SsSIlosVnsx6 CX2H%2FdkEHg>http://www.moveon.org/subscrip/one.mhtml?list_id=103=645-660726-SsS IlosVnsx6CX2H%2FdkEHg > <snip> ______________ >WHO IS DICK CHENEY? > MoveOn Bulletin > Thursday, July 11, 2002 > Edited by Eli Pariser >(<mailto:eli.pariser@moveon.org>eli.pariser@moveon.org) > > Subscribe online at: > <http://www.moveon.org/moveonbulletin/>http://www.moveon.org/moveonbulletin/ > CONTENTS: 1. <#section-2.>Introduction 2. <#section-3.>One Link 3. <#section-4.>Cheney in Numbers 4. <#section-5.>Halliburton Days 5. <#section-6.>A Lot of Energy 6. <#section-7.>More About Cheney 7. <#section-8.>About the MoveOn Bulletin and MoveOn.org > > INTRODUCTION: MAN OF MYSTERY > "Cheney and Bush want privacy for their conversations, but not for anyone >else's." --Tony Mauro in USA Today, Feb. 27, 2002 > > Since September 11, Vice President Dick Cheney has kept a low profile. >For months, he rarely appeared at all, emerging only to sell his political >ideas on CNN or to dismiss allegations of corporate wrongdoing. Even now, >Cheney mostly stays in a "secure location," ready to spring into action if >President Bush is attacked. > > Unlike most politicians, Cheney actually enjoys working in the >background. By his own account, he doesn't relish campaigning, and he's >hardly a natural spokesman, but Cheney excels at assembling and managing >teams of people to "get stuff done." > > Since he and Bush arrived at the White House, Cheney has managed to >accomplish quite a bit. He's met with the heads of oil, gas, and nuclear >power companies, assembled their "wish lists," and turned them into a new >national Energy Plan. Cheney's close relations with folks like Ken Lay of >Enron have made this one of the most corporation-friendly administrations >in history. > > In this issue of the MoveOn Bulletin, we take an in-depth look at Dick >Cheney. It's not surprising that Cheney is avoiding the limelight: an SEC >investigation is under way on accounting practices at Halliburton, the >company he ran, and Congress's investigative body is still trying to >determine how much of the Energy Plan he organized was shaped by oil, >coal, and nuclear energy executives. Given his key role in determining the >policy and practice of the Bush administration, an understanding of >Cheney's history is important. > > When Cheney was Chief of Staff for President Gerald Ford, his code name >was "Backseat." Perhaps these days President Bush's nickname suits him >better: for Cheney, it's "Big Time." > > > ONE LINK > "[S]triking another blow for freedom from government interference, Mr. >Cheney led Halliburton into the top ranks of corporate welfare hogs, >benefiting from almost $2 billion in taxpayer-insured loans from the U.S. >Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corp. In the five >years before Mr. Cheney joined the company, it got a measly $100 million >in government loans." Molly Ivins' article, "Cheney's Mess Worth a Close >Look" is online at: ><http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0610-03.htm>http://www.commondreams.org/vi >ews02/0610-03.htm > > CHENEY IN NUMBERS * Cheney's 2000 income from Halliburton: $36,086,635 * >Increase in government contracts while Cheney led Halliburton: 91% * >Minimum size of "accounting irregularity" that occurred while Cheney was >CEO: $100,000,000 (One hundred MILLION dollars) * Number of the seven >official US "State Sponsors of Terror" that Halliburton contracted with: 2 >out of 7 * Pages of Energy Plan documents Cheney refused to give >congressional investigators: 13,500 * Amount energy companies gave the >Bush/Cheney presidential campaign: $1,800,000 > HALLIBURTON DAYS > "[W]hen I was Secretary of Defense, my biggest problem was with the >Congress of the United States. > > Now that I'm chairman and CEO of a Fortune 500 company, my biggest >problem is the Congress of the United States." --Dick Cheney, during an >address to the Export-Import Bank Conference, May 8, 1997. > > Cheney was asked to assume the helm of Halliburton in 1995. As one of the >largest global providers of equipment and services to the oil industry, >Halliburton needed a chief executive who could ensure that the company had >the government's full support. Cheney's close connections to top >government and industry decision makers made him perfect for this role. > > In a debate with Vice Presidential candidate Joe Lieberman in 2000, >Lieberman noted that Cheney had done well for himself as CEO of >Halliburton. Cheney responded flatly, "I can tell you, Joe, the government >had absolutely nothing to do with it." But even a glance at Cheney's >tenure at Halliburton suggests otherwise. > > During his five years as CEO, Cheney nearly doubled the size of >Halliburton's government contracts, totaling a whopping $2.3 billion. He >convinced the Export-Import Bank of the U.S. to lend Halliburton and oil >companies another $1.5 billion, backed by U.S. taxpayers. As exposed in >the article below, some of these loans went to a Russian company with ties >to drug dealing and organized crime. > ><http://www.public-i.org/story_01_080200.htm>http://www.public-i.org/story_01_08 >0200.htm > > Cheney's rule at Halliburton was characterized by a ruthless geopolitical >strategy that put aside political beliefs whenever they were inconvenient. >In a number of cases, Halliburton and its subsidiaries supported or even >ordered human rights violations and broke international laws. Consider the >following examples: > > * Libyan dictator and suspected anti-U.S. terrorist Moammar Gadhafi >engaged a foreign subsidiary of Halliburton company Brown & Root to >perform millions of dollars worth of work. According to the Baltimore Sun, >Brown & Root was fined $3.8 million for violating Libyan sanctions. >(Although Cheney wasn't leading Halliburton when these sales started, >subsidiaries' sales to Libya continued throughout his tenure.) > > * Cheney claimed that he supported the U.S. sanctions on Iraq, but the >Financial Times of London reported that through foreign subsidiaries and >affiliates, Halliburton became the biggest oil contractor for Iraq, >selling more than $73 million in goods and services to Saddam Hussein's >regime. (See ><http://gwbush.com/spots/postpage.html>http://gwbush.com/spots/postpage.html for >a Washington Post article on the matter.) > > * In Burma, Halliburton joined oil companies in working on two notorious >gas pipelines, the Yadana and Yetagun. According to an Earth Rights >report, "From 1992 until the present, thousands of villagers in Burma were >forced to work in support of these pipelines and related infrastructure, >lost their homes due to forced relocation, and were raped, tortured and >killed by soldiers hired by the companies as security guards for the >pipelines. One of Halliburton’s projects was undertaken during Dick >Cheney’s tenure as CEO." (The full report is linked to below.) > > Halliburton is now being investigated by the Securities and Exchange >Commission for Enron-style accounting practices that took place while >Cheney was CEO. > ><http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/30/business/30HALL.html>http://www.nytimes.com/2 >002/05/30/business/30HALL.html > > More on Cheney and Halliburton: > > For an extensive briefing on Halliburton and Cheney's foreign policy >impact, check out this well-written and thorough report: ><http://www.earthrights.org/halliburton/report.pdf>http://www.earthrights.org/h >alliburton/report.pdf > > Cheney made $36 million at Halliburton in 2000 alone. Thesmokinggun.com >has his tax returns to prove it: ><http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/dicktax1.shtml>http://www.thesmokinggun.c >om/archive/dicktax1.shtml > > > A LOT OF ENERGY > "Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a >sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy." --Cheney, in a >speech in Toronto, Canada, May 1, 2001. > > The ongoing fracas over Cheney's Energy Plan ties together many of the >themes of his working life: his corporate alliances, especially with >energy companies; his view of oil as integral to U.S. foreign policy; and >his insistence on secrecy for the activities of the Executive branch. > > On May 16, 2001, Cheney revealed the results of months of meetings of his >Energy Task Force: a national energy plan. President Bush had established >the Task Force in January 2001, under Vice President Cheney's leadership. >(See > <http://www.whitehouse.gov/energy/>http://www.whitehouse.gov/energy/ for >the final plan.) > > The plan essentially made Cheney's statement about 'personal virtue' >national policy. It put a premium on exploring for and extracting more >oil, and proposed that the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve be used for >this purpose. While it paid lip service to alternative energy sources, its >recommendations focused almost exclusively on the need for more "energy >supply" -- more oil, more nuclear plants, more coal. > > According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, "the Bush plan would >provide no short-term relief for Americans struggling to pay their >gasoline and electric bills this summer. And, over the long-term, it would >increase pollution, despoil the environment, threaten public health and >accelerate global warming. Moreover, it would have no impact on energy >prices, and no practical effect on U.S. dependence on foreign sources of >oil. Who would benefit? The oil, coal and nuclear industries that shoveled >millions of dollars into Bush campaign coffers." > > Shortly before the Plan was revealed, controversy arose. On April 19, >2001, Representatives Henry Waxman (D-CA) and John Dingell (D-MI) wrote to >the General Accounting Office (GAO), asking it to investigate the Task >Force. According to the GAO, "The congressional investigation of the task >force was prompted by news reports that the task force had met privately >with major campaign contributors, such as Kenneth Lay, the CEO of Enron, >to discuss energy policy. According to these reports, major Republican >contributors attended private sessions with Vice President Cheney and the >task force met secretly with other contributors in formulating the >President's National Energy Policy." > > In response, Cheney's counsel returned a letter, refusing to disclose >whom Cheney and the Task Force had met with and even who was on the Task >Force's staff. The GAO made a formal demand for information; Cheney >rebuffed it, citing Executive Privilege. It's worth noting that the GAO >wasn't even requesting the minutes of the Task Force meetings; it merely >wanted to know who the Task Force met with, and when. > > In late August 2001, a Los Angeles Times article exposed the connections >between Cheney's Task Force and Bush's campaign contributors. The article >described how the final report adopted verbatim a global warming policy >suggested by the U.S. Energy Association (an energy industry group), how >language was altered to favor Halliburton, and how a company called >Peabody Coal and its affiliates gave more than $900,000 to the Bush >campaign and "gained extraordinary access" to the Task Force. (See ><http://www.commondreams.org/headlines01/0826-02.htm>http://www.commondreams.org >/headlines01/0826-02.htm for a copy of the article.) > > As Enron collapsed, Cheney continued to refuse access to the documents of >the Task Force. In February 22, 2002, the GAO filed suit to obtain the >documents, some of which have since been turned over. But large questions >about the circumstances under which the Bush Administration's energy >policy was formed remain. The evidence indicates that the final product >was a gift for the energy industry from Cheney, their former colleague. > > More on Cheney and the Energy Plan: > > The GAO's comprehensive timeline of the Cheney failure to turn over the >Task Force documents is viewable at: ><http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65.org/r2.php3?r=60>http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65 >.org/r2.php3?r=60 > > You can search the documents that Cheney was ordered to make public at: > ><http://www.nrdc.org/air/energy/taskforce/tfinx.asp>http://www.nrdc.org/air/ener >gy/taskforce/tfinx.asp > > You can read NRDC's "Slower, Costlier, and Dirtier: A Critique of the >Bush Energy Plan" at: > ><http://www.nrdc.org/air/energy/scd/execsum.asp>http://www.nrdc.org/air/energy/s >cd/execsum.asp > > "With so many new international crises erupting every day, it is hard to >detect any clear forward direction to American U.S. foreign policy. At >times, it appears that providing a response to the latest upheaval is >about all that Washington can accomplish. But beneath the surface of >day-to-day crisis management, one can see signs of an overarching plan for >U.S. policy: a strategy of global oil acquisition." --Michael Klare, >Pacific News Service: ><http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65.org/r2.php3?r=61>http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65 >.org/r2.php3?r=61 > > Satire: Cheney's 10 energy tips > ><http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65.org/r2.php3?r=62>http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65. >org/r2.php3?r=62 > > > MORE ABOUT CHENEY > The White House's official page on the Vice President: ><http://www.whitehouse.gov/vicepresident/>http://www.whitehouse.gov/vicepreside >nt/ > > A short, and perhaps too sweet, biography that captures the highlights of >Cheney's career: > ><http://www.infoplease.com/spot/cheney1.html>http://www.infoplease.com/spot/chen >ey1.html > > The Christian Science Monitor offers a little more background on Cheney, >prior to the 2000 election. "Cheney's connections and influence are seen >everywhere these days - giving rise to talk that he's CEO to Bush's >Chairman of the Board. Most people around Cheney probably suffer from >something like Rolodex-envy." ><http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2000/12/20/fp1s2-csm.shtml>http://www.csmonit >or.com/durable/2000/12/20/fp1s2-csm.shtml > > A PBS Newshour report on Cheney's management style and personality. > ><http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65.org/r2.php3?r=63>http://www.9-11%70%65%61%63%65. >org/r2.php3?r=63 > > ABOUT THE MOVEON BULLETIN AND MOVEON > The MoveOn Bulletin is a free, biweekly email bulletin providing >information, resources, news, and action ideas on the political issues >that shape our lives. The full text of the MoveOn Bulletin is online at ><http://www.moveon.org/moveonbulletin/>http://www.moveon.org/moveonbulletin/; us >ers can subscribe at that address. The MoveOn Bulletin is a project of >MoveOn.org. > > MoveOn.org is an issue-oriented, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that >gives people a voice in shaping the laws that affect our lives. MoveOn.org >engages people in the civic process, using the Internet to democratically >determine a non-partisan agenda, raising public awareness of pressing >issues, and coordinating grassroots advocacy campaigns to encourage sound >public policies. > > You can help decide the direction of MoveOn.org by participating in the >discussion forum at: > ><http://www.actionforum.com/forum/index.html?forum_id=223>http://www.actionforum >.com/forum/index.html?forum_id=223 > > This is a message from MoveOn.org. 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