(WMR) -- The
Bush-Cheney administration has something else for which it can congratulate
itself, in addition to the military quagmire it created in Iraq with its
"surge." According to the international corruption watchdog group
Transparency International, Iraq is now the third most corrupt nation in the
world, ranking just ahead of last place Somalia and the military dictatorship
of Burma.
It is so bad in Iraq that Iraqi Judge Radhi al-Radhi, who
was in charge of anti-corruption efforts in the country as head of the Iraqi
Commission on Public Integrity, was forced to flee Iraq for the United States
last year. Thirty-one of al-Radhi's investigators were assassinated, a clear
indication that it was time for al-Radhi and his family to escape. It is clear
that the government of U.S. puppet Nouri al-Maliki, who, along with his top
henchman, have squirreled away billions in bank accounts and real estate
holdings in Switzerland, London, and Chicago. The Maliki assassins were so
brutal that even the bodies of 12 family members of al-Radhi's investigators
were found with drill holes in their bodies, evidence that they were tortured
before they were murdered.
Saddam Hussein's government never approached the level of
corruption in Iraq now being advanced and nurtured by the puppet Maliki regime.
In bed with U.S. contractors like Halliburton, Blackwater, and other firms
that have raked in obscene profits from the neocon-inspired and
directed war, the Maliki regime has turned over Iraq's oil production to
foreign oil companies, failed to properly account for its own oil revenues,
ignored even the most basic accounting procedures, and now plans to play a
diversion game by suing businessmen and government officials in the West it
accuses of profiting from the Saddam Hussein era's United Nations
"Oil-for-Food" program.
Meanwhile, the State Department, which contracted with
al-Radhi to oversee anti-corruption efforts in Iraq, now wants nothing to do
with him. Almost broke and living in a suburb of Washington, DC, al-Radhi has
been the subject of a neocon character assassination campaign. Even though al-Radhi
has testified before Rep. Henry Waxman's House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform, the Democrats did nothing as al-Radhi's son reportedly had
his U.S. residency visa pulled by the State Department and was forced to return
to Iraq where he now faces a fate similar to
al-Radhi's investigators and their families if Judge al-Radhi does
not cease his criticism of Maliki and his corrupt cronies.
Maliki has ensured that he and his cronies are exempt from
anti-corruption investigations and Iraq's former Electricity Minister
Aiham Alsammarae, appointed by US viceroy Paul Bremer and already
convicted for fraud, escaped from Baghdad's Green Zone in late 2006, with the
assistance of Blackwater, during his trial for embezzling billions of more
dollars from Iraq's coffers. Alsammarae now lives very comfortably in Oak
Brook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. Alsammarae is a friend of convicted
Chicago land developer Tony Rezko. An INTERPOL Red Notice arrest warrant
remains active on Alsammarae, although it has mysteriously disappeared from
INTERPOL's web site.
Maliki issued an order that he, his current and
former ministers like Alsammarae, and President Jalal Talabani, who is
overseeing his own profits for him and his own cronies in the area governed by
the Kurdistan Regional Government, are exempt from any anti-corruption
investigations.
Alsammarae's colleague, former Iraqi Defense Minister Hazen
Shalaan, also fled Baghdad after being convicted for fraud, including buying
used Polish weapons and claiming they were new. Shalaan, also the subject of an
INTERPOL Red Notice arrest warrant, lives comfortably in Acton in west London,
according to a BBC investigation. The BBC reported that Shalaan jets around the
world in a private jet regardless of the INTERPOL warrant. The BBC estimates
that Shalaan, Alsammarae, Maliki, and the other fraudsters who govern Iraq have
siphoned off some $23 billion. Only about 5 to 6 percent of Iraqi funds get to
the intended recipients, the rest is ending up in the pockets of Maliki and his
cronies, as well as in the coffers of US companies, the most prominent and
corrupt being Vice President Dick Cheney's former firm, Halliburton.
The Republicans on Waxman's committee, particularly outgoing
Rep. Tom Davis (R-VA), attempted to discredit al-Radhi. The GOP members pointed
out that al-Radhi's charges were ridiculous since General David Petraeus had
already testified before Congress that the situation in Iraq was going so
well. WMR has previously reported that Petraeus has also personally benefited
from fraudulent activities during his tenure in Iraq; activities that were
discovered by the late Colonel Ted Westhusing, who was said to have shot
himself to death in Baghdad shortly before he was to return to the United
States.
To cover its own tracks of corruption, the State Department
is now reclassifying documents it prepared on fraud involving the Iraqi
government to Confidential and Secret from Sensitive but Unclassified. The
documents all supported al-Radhi's fraud findings against the Maliki regime. A
"gag order" by the Bush administration is preventing any State
Department or other government officials from testifying to Congress about
fraud in Iraq.
Al Radhi's and his family's requests for political asylum
are being refused by the Bush-Cheney administration. The Maliki regime has
banned Al-Radhi from returning to Iraq, turning the former Iraqi judge and his
family into "stateless" people. Moreover, the State Department, which
once hailed al-Radhi's performance, is refusing to write him letters of
recommendation for employment in the private sector. Private charities are now
seeing to the welfare of al-Radhi and his family.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright © 2008 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report.