Kleptocrats at Work
by
Paul Craig Roberts
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: Americans
Are Oppressed, Too
Kleptocracy
is as old as government. Exotic car broker Michael Sheehan discovered
an amazing case nine years ago when he was invited to purchase rare
Ferraris and McLaren F1s from a Brunei collection. He writes about
it in the current issue of Sports Car Market.
Brunei is a
family-owned oil Sultanate of 400,000 people located on the island
of Borneo in southeast Asia. A brother of the sultan was finance
minister until 1997, when the Asian financial crisis hit Brunei.
The Arthur Anderson accounting firm was called in to audit the books.
The accountants found that between 1983 and 1998 $40 billion had
disappeared and that the finance minister himself had personally
spent $14.8 billion.
The finance
minister had a collection of 2,500 exotic cars, 500 properties,
five yachts, and nine world-class aircraft. He had managed to spend
$900,000,000 in the London jeweler Asprey, apparently guaranteeing
the old age retirements of a number of attractive women who consort
with kleptocrats.
The finance
minister was allowed to keep 500 of the cars, but he had to turn
in the rest of his loot to no avail as we shall see.
Sheehan went
to Brunei to view the cars. From his general description of the
collection, I estimate that the finance minister had paid six figures
for the least expensive car in the collection. Many cost much more.
McLaren F1s cost $1,000,000 new. They are more valuable now. In
October 2008 one sold at a London auction for $4,100,000. Many of
the cars were custom built. Some of the high-speed Ferraris "were
coated in radar-absorbent matt-black coatings and fitted with infrared
cameras for night driving." Easily more than one billion dollars
of Brunei’s oil revenues had found their way into the finance minister’s
car collection.
Sheehan reports
that the cars were stored in about 12 buildings "surrounded
by a high wall topped with razor wire and with a bomb-proof front
gate" and patrolled by "armed Gurkhas with very serious
German shepherds." The security was for naught, because "the
air conditioning was off, but the tropical sun was not." Years
of heat and humidity had destroyed the cars. The storage facilities
had become a car tomb.
Sheehan concluded
that most of the cars were in such a state of ruin that only a few
of the cars had sufficiently high inherent values to support commercially
viable restorations. The best use of the rest, Sheehan decided,
would be to turn them into an artificial ocean reef.
The careless
waste is shocking and even more so to car buffs who consider many
of the ruined cars to be artistic masterpieces. This is the kind
of opulent waste that we associate with family-owned countries.
But before we Americans start feeling superior, consider that the
U.S. government puts the Brunei finance minister to shame.
On January
29, 2002, CBS
Evening News reported that the Pentagon had lost track of $2.3
trillion, yes, $2,300 billion. Defense Secretary Rumsfeld admitted,
"According to some estimates we cannot track $2.3 trillion
in transactions." "We know it is gone," said Jim
Minnery of the Defense Finance and Accounting Service, "but
we don’t know what they spent it on."
Reported thefts
from Iraq and Afghanistan reconstruction aid rival Brunei’s missing
billions. Pallets of cash stacked high have been flown out of Afghanistan
in plain view. The stories of corruption and missing funds are so
numerous that they are no longer reported.
The U.S. Congress,
at President Obama’s request, recently passed the largest military
spending bill of all time in behalf of the share prices of the military/security
complex, while many of the 50 states teeter on bankruptcy and default
on pensions and municipal bonds and slash education, medical, and
other services. For "our" government in Washington, it
is a no-brainer that the profits of the military-security complex
take every precedence over every need of the American people.
If
the Brunei finance minister’s billion-dollar car collection becomes
an artificial reef, it will foster marine life. In contrast, Dick
Cheney seriously damaged, perhaps for many years to come, the Gulf
of Mexico, because Cheney believed a few extra bucks for the oil
companies were more important than safety standards. The missing
safety standards have cost British Petroleum $20 billion in clean-up
and restitution costs.
U.S. taxpayers
are paying the Orwellian Department of Homeland Security
$56,336,000,000
this year to porno-scan and grope them and otherwise invade their
privacy, while millions of Americans are foreclosed out of their
homes.
How are the
priorities of the U.S. government superior to those of the Brunei
finance minister? When it comes to waste and corruption, lies and
deception, the U.S. government has no equal.
February
7, 2010
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail], a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2010 Paul Craig Roberts
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