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~ It's Time to Rise and Shine ~


We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality planet and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is the Answer by means of Knowledge and Awareness!



Cheney Made Millions Off Oil Deals with Hussein 
San Francisco Bay Guardian  November 13, 2000
by Martin A. Lee

Here's a whopper of a story you may have missed amid the cacophony of 
campaign ads and stump speeches in the run-up to the elections.

During former defense secretary Richard Cheney's five-year tenure as chief 
executive of Halliburton, Inc., his oil services firm raked in big bucks 
from dubious commercial dealings with Iraq. Cheney left Halliburton with a 
$34 million retirement package last July when he became the GOP's 
vice-presidential candidate.

Of course, U.S. firms aren't generally supposed to do business with Saddam 
Hussein. But thanks to legal loopholes large enough to steer an oil tanker 
through, Halliburton profited big-time from deals with the Iraqi 
dictatorship. Conducted discreetly through several Halliburton subsidiaries 
in Europe, these greasy transactions helped Saddam Hussein retain his grip 
on power while lining the pockets of Cheney and company.

According to the Financial Times of London, between September 1998 and last 
winter, Cheney, as CEO of Halliburton, oversaw $23.8 million of business 
contracts for the sale of oil-industry equipment and services to Iraq 
through two of its subsidiaries, Dresser Rand and Ingersoll-Dresser Pump, 
which helped rebuild Iraq's war-damaged petroleum-productioninfrastructure. 
The combined value of these contracts exceeded those of any other U.S. 
company doing business with Baghdad.

Halliburton was among more than a dozen American firms that supplied Iraq's 
petroleum industry with spare parts and retooled its oil rigs when U.N. 
sanctions were eased in 1998. Cheney's company utilized subsidiaries in 
France, Italy, Germany, and Austria so as not to draw undue attention to 
controversial business arrangements that might embarrass Washington and 
jeopardize lucrative ties to Iraq, which will pump $24 billion of petrol 
under the U.N.-administered oil-for-food program this year. Assisted by 
Halliburton, Hussein's government will earn another $1 billion by illegally 
exporting oil through black-market channels.

With Cheney at the helm since 1995, Halliburton quickly grew into America's 
number-one oil-services company, the fifth-largest military contractor, and 
the biggest nonunion employer in the nation. Although Cheney claimed that 
the U.S. government "had absolutely nothing to do" with his firm's meteoric 
financial success, State Department documents obtained by the Los Angeles 
Times indicate that U.S. officials helped Halliburton secure major contracts 
in Asia and Africa. Halliburton now does business in 130 countries and 
employs more than 100,000 workers worldwide.

Its 1999 income was a cool $15 billion.

In addition to Iraq, Halliburton counts among its business partners several 
brutal dictatorships that have committed egregious human rights abuses, 
including the hated military regime in Burma (Myanmar).

EarthRights, a Washington, D.C.-based human rights watchdog, condemned 
Halliburton for two energy-pipeline projects in Burma that led to the forced 
relocation of villages, rape, murder, indentured labor, and other crimes 
against humanity.

A full report (this is a 45 page pdf file -- there is also a brief summary) 
on the Burma connection, "Halliburton's Destructive Engagement," can be 
accessed on EarthRights' Web site. Human rights activists have also 
criticized Cheney's company for its questionable role in Algeria, Angola, 
Bosnia, Croatia, Haiti, Rwanda, Somalia, Indonesia, and other volatile 
trouble spots. In Russia, Halliburton's partner, Tyumen Oil, has been 
accused of committing massive fraud to gain control of a Siberian oil field.

And in oil-rich Nigeria, Halliburton worked with Shell and Chevron, which 
were implicated in gross human rights violations and environmental 
calamities in that country. Indeed, Cheney's firm increased its involvement 
in the Niger Delta after the military government executed several ecology 
activists and crushed popular protests against the oil industry. Halliburton 
also had business dealings in Iran and Libya, which remain on the State 
Department's list of terrorist states. Brown and Root, a Halliburton 
subsidiary, was fined $3.8 million for re-exporting U.S. goods to Libya in 
violation of U.S. sanctions.

But in terms of sheer hypocrisy, Halliburton's relationship with Saddam 
Hussein is hard to top. What's more, Cheney lied about his company's 
activities in Iraq when journalists fleetingly raised the issue during the 
campaign.

Questioned by Sam Donaldson on ABC's This Week program in August, Cheney 
bluntly asserted that Halliburton had no dealings with the Iraqi regime 
while he was on board.

Donaldson: I'm told, and correct me if I'm wrong, that Halliburton, through 
subsidiaries, was actually trying to do business in Iraq?

Cheney: No. No. I had a firm policy that I wouldn't do anything in Iraq even 
arrangements that were supposedly legal.

And that was it! ABC News and the other U.S. networks dropped the issue like 
a hot potato. As damning information about Halliburton surfaced in the 
European press, American reporters stuck to old routines and took their cues 
on how to cover the campaign from the two main political parties, both of 
which had very little to say about official U.S. support for abusive 
corporate policies at home and abroad.

But why, in this instance, didn't the Democrats stomp and scream about 
Cheney's Iraq connection? The Gore campaign undoubtedly knew of 
Halliburton's smarmy business dealings from the get-go. Gore and Lieberman 
could have made hay about how the wannabe GOP veep had been in cahoots with 
Saddam. Such explosive revelations may well have swayed voters and boosted 
Gore's chances in what was shaping up to be a close electoral contest.

The Democratic standard-bearers dropped the ball in part because 
Halliburton's conduct was generally in accordance with the foreign policy of 
the Clinton administration. Cheney is certainly not the only Washington 
mover and shaker to have been affiliated with a company trading in Iraq. 
Former CIA Director John Deutsch, who served in a Democratic administration, 
is a member of the board of directors of Schlumberger, the second-largest 
U.S. oil-services company, which also does business through subsidiaries in 
Iraq.

Despite occasional rhetorical skirmishes, a bipartisan foreign-policy 
consensus prevails on Capital Hill, where the commitment to human rights, 
with a few notable exceptions, is about as deep as an oil slick.

Truth be told, trading with the enemy is a time-honored American corporate 
practice or perhaps "malpractice" would be a more appropriate description of 
big-business ties to repressive regimes. Given that Saddam Hussein, the 
pariah du jour, has often been compared to Hitler, it's worth pointing out 
that several blue-chip U.S. firms profited from extensive commercial 
dealings with Nazi Germany. Shockingly, some American companies including 
Standard Oil, Ford, ITT, GM, and General Electric secretly kept trading with 
the Nazi enemy while American soldiers fought and died during World War II.

Today General Electric is among the companies that are back in business with 
Saddam Hussein, even as American jets and battleships attack Iraq on a 
weekly basis using weapons made by G.E. But the United Nations sanctions 
committee, dominated by U.S. officials, has routinely blocked medicines and 
other essential items from being delivered to Iraq through the oil-for-food 
program, claiming they have a potential military "dual use." These sanctions 
have taken a terrible toll on ordinary Iraqis, and on children in 
particular, while the likes of Halliburton and G.E. continue to lubricate 
their coffers.