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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Australian companies rush to profit from Iraqi devastation
By Rick Kelly
19 May 2003
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In the aftermath of its participation in the illegal invasion
of Iraq, the Howard government has rushed to ensure that Australian
corporations win a slice of the multi-million dollar contracts
being offered for the rebuilding of Iraqs devastated infrastructure.
Between April 27 and May 2, Australias trade minister, Mark
Vaile, led a delegation of executives from 10 major Australian
construction, engineering, and oil and gas companies in talks
with US officials and corporate executives.
The delegation, which included senior figures from BHP, Santos,
Multiplex, Clough Engineering, Australian Power and Water, and
Woodside Petroleum, visited several US cities. They held discussions
with the largest of the American firms awarded reconstruction
contracts from USAID (Agency for International Development).
Vaile also met with USAID administrator, Andrew Natsios, who
told the minister that while the prime contracts will continue
to go to US companies, Australia had the opportunity to bid for
valuable subcontracts. USAID, Vaile told journalists after the
meeting, was very warmly disposed to any Australian involvement
at that level with the prime contractors.
These subcontracts are potentially worth up to $US680 million
for Australian business. As Vaile made clear, however, what is
at stake is far more than the initial value of the contracts on
offer. In Washington, he noted that ultimately theres
going to be billions of dollars spent in the whole rehabilitation
and reconstruction process ... those companies that can get themselves
in on the ground floor now stand a strong chance to be there for
the long run.
The Australian business delegation held talks with Bechtel;
the US construction giant that has been awarded the most valuable
of the initial primary contracts. [See Bechtel awarded Iraq contract:
war profits and the US military-industrial complex]
Vaile subsequently described this meeting as promising,
and said that Bechtel executives had denied initial reports that
non-American firms would be barred from winning more than 50 percent
of the total reconstruction subcontracts. Vaile also led Australian
oil and gas companies in talks with Halliburton Energy Services
Group.
Both the US and Australian governments have been careful to
deny any connection between access to the commercial contracts
and Australias participation in the invasion of Iraq. There
can be no doubt, however, that, as the Howard government expected,
Australias role in the coalition of the willing
has earned Australian business a sympathetic hearing in Washington.
Vaile proudly noted that in the US there was a very high
level of awareness, obviously, and an empathy to the fact that,
you know, Australia and Britain were the other two key players
in the coalition of the willing.
While there were decisive strategic motivations underlying
the governments participation in the war, the expected corporate
windfall undoubtedly played a key role in the governments
calculations. Indeed, the prime ministers insistence that
support for the US-led attack against Iraq was in the national
interest can only be understood in light of the post-war
carve up of the impoverished country.
The efforts of the government to capitalise on the destruction
of Iraqi society seemingly bore fruit on May 6 when Patrick Corporation
became the first Australian company to secure one of the subcontracts.
Patrick won the contract, the value of which has not been disclosed,
with the US firm SkyLink Air and Logistical Support. Patrick is
to be responsible for assessing the state of Baghdad Airport,
and reporting on the work required to resume full operations there.
Patricks only previous operation in the Middle East was
in Dubai, five years ago, when non-union dockworkers were secretly
trained as part of Patricks effort to break the Maritime
Union of Australia. Patrick, and its head Chris Corrigan, became
notorious for its anti-worker policies and the provocative use
of German shepherd dogs and balaclava-clad security against dockers
picket lines. It is highly indicative of the nature of the reconstruction
that the first Australian company to win a contract has such a
record with regard to workers rights.
Conflict over wheat exports
Australias attempts to secure reconstruction deals have
been conducted with a general acceptance of the inevitability
of American dominance in the contracting process. It is an altogether
different situation with regard to wheat and other agricultural
exports to Iraq. There have been increasingly acrimonious disputes
between Australia and the US over the Iraqi wheat market.
Under the United Nations oil-for-food program,
Iraq imported approximately three million tonnes of wheat annually,
two-thirds of which came from Australia. These exports were worth
$A839 million to Australia in 2002, and in the lead up to the
invasion of Iraq, the government came under strong pressure from
farming groups to ensure that this valuable market would not be
lost to the US.
The war against Iraq has had a terrible effect on Iraqi agriculture,
which was already suffering the effects of the sanctions imposed
after the 1991 Gulf War. The UN Food and Agricultural Organisation
has recently estimated that in the aftermath of the devastating
war, Iraqs agricultural sector will only produce enough
cereals, mainly wheat and barley, to meet one-third of the countrys
needs this year. This shortfall, combined with the general breakdown
of social services, has resulted in severe food shortages.
Despite this humanitarian crisis, both the United States and
Australia have viewed Iraqs wheat imports as a strictly
commercial issue. The US is keen to re-establish the Iraqi market
for its own agricultural sector. Before the 1991 Gulf War, the
US exported almost one million tonnes of wheat annually to Iraq,
and there have been strident calls in America to shut out Australia
in favour of its own producers.
Dawn Forsythe, a spokesperson for the US Wheat Associates lobby
group, described Australias desire to maintain its export
position in Iraq as astounding. We have been
forced out of the market based on politics, she claimed,
and [the Australians] seem to want to want to divvy it up
based on past sales.
That this view is shared by the Bush administration was indicated
by the appointment of Dan Amstutz to lead the agricultural section
of the interim administration in Iraq. Amstutz is a former senior
executive of Cargill Corporation, the largest grain exporter in
the world, and is also the former president of the North American
Grain Export Association. The UK-based charity and aid organisation,
Oxfam, aptly described placing Amstutz in charge of agricultural
reconstruction as like putting Saddam Hussein in the chair
of a human rights commission.
While Australia has been promised an open tender process for
the renegotiated wheat contracts, the main concern in Canberra
is that the US will undercut Australian farmers through the use
of the massive agricultural and export subsidies that prop up
Americas agricultural sector. Australias minister
for agriculture, Warren Truss, said last month that the government
was concerned about the USs use of a mixture of aid
and commercial services to break into new markets. We would expect
the US to respect the markets that we have in Iraq.
Mark Vaile put these concerns to the US Agriculture Secretary,
Ann Veneman, when the pair met in Washington. After the meeting
Vaile declared: [W]eve agreed that we expect our respective
grain industries and grain traders to operate and compete transparently
in markets across the world without intervention or support. And
all we expect is [that] they compete in a fair and transparent
manner. I made that point to Ann Veneman this afternoon and certainly
she agreed thats the expectation on both sides.
This statement was reported in the Australian media as a significant
victory for the Australian position, with Washington apparently
promising not to allow export subsidies to advantage US producers.
American officials, however, quickly scotched reports of this
apparent concession. Venemans press secretary said that
no promise had been made and that the subject of trade subsidies
did not come up [during the meeting] at a specific level.
This denial was an embarrassing rebuff for the Australian government.
For all the frantic efforts of John Howard and Mark Vaile, the
US has consistently refused to make any significant concessions
to Australias commercial interests in Iraq. It remains to
be seen exactly how the contracts for Iraqi wheat imports are
divided up, but as Charlie Sernatinger, a grain analyst with Chicagos
OConnor & Co., said, the fight for the contracts will
be as ugly a political battle as youre going to see.
See Also:
Australian foreign minister
grovels in Washington
[9 April 2003]
Australian cabinet rubberstamps
military commitment to Iraq war
[22 March 2003]
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