“In the Early 1980’s the US Used Iraq & Other Sunni Arab Govts in the Region to 
STOP Iran Exporting Its Revolutionary Ideas Beyond Its Shores. Twenty (20) Odd 
Years Down the Line the US Topples the Very Regime in Iraq Which It Helped in 
the 1980’s & Gives the Power to the Shias. What About the Muslims. They are 
DEAF, DUMB & BLIND & Led Like LAMB to the Slaughter from Both the Sectarian 
Divide, While the US & Its Allies Are Laughing All the Way to the Bank As It 
Were.” - AB
  The War Dividend: The British Companies Making a Fortune Out of 
Conflict-Riven Iraq  By Robert Verkaik   
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article350959.ece  British 
businesses have profited by at least £1.1bn since coalition forces toppled 
Saddam Hussein three years ago, the first comprehensive investigation into UK 
corporate investment in Iraq has found. 
   
  The company roll-call of post-war profiteers includes some of the best known 
names in Britain's boardrooms as well many who would prefer to remain 
anonymous. They come from private security services, banks, PR consultancies, 
urban planning consortiums, oil companies, architects offices and energy 
advisory bodies.
   
  Among the top earners is the construction firm Amec, which has made an 
estimated £500m from a series of contracts restoring electrical systems and 
maintaining power generation facilities during the past two years. Aegis, which 
provides private security has earned more than £246m from a three-year contract 
with the Pentagon to co-ordinate military and security companies in Iraq. 
Erinys, which specialises in the same area, has made more than £86m, a 
substantial portion from the protection of oilfields.
   
  The evidence of massive investments and the promise of more 
multimillion-pound profits to come was discovered in a joint investigation by 
Corporate Watch, an independent watchdog, and The Independent. The findings 
show how much is stake if Britain were to withdraw military protection from 
Iraq. British company involvement at the top of Iraq's new political and 
economic structures means Iraq will be forced to rely on British business for 
many years to come.
   
  A total of 61 British companies are identified as benefiting from at least 
£1.1bn of contracts and investment in the new Iraq. But that figure is just the 
tip of the iceberg; Corporate Watch believes it could be as much as five times 
higher, because many companies prefer to keep their relationship secret. The 
waters are further muddied by the Government's refusal to release the names of 
companies it has helped to win contracts in Iraq.
   
  Many of the companies enjoy long-standing relationships with Labour and now 
have a financial stake in the reconstruction of Iraq in Britain's image. Of the 
total profits published in the report, the British taxpayer has had to meet a 
bill for £78m while the US taxpayer's contribution to UK corporate earnings in 
Iraq is nearly nine times that. Iraqis themselves have paid British company 
directors £150m.
   
  The report acknowledges that British business still lags behind the huge 
profits paid to American companies. But, in two fields, Britain is playing a 
critical and leading role. 
   
  The threat from the Iraqi insurgency means British private security companies 
are in great demand. Corporate Watch estimates there are between 20,000 and 
30,000 security personnel working in Iraq, half of whom are employed by 
companies run by retired senior British officers and at least two former 
defence ministers.
   
  The biggest British player, Aegis - run by Tim Spicer, the former British 
army lieutenant colonel who founded the security company Sandline - has a 
workforce the size of a military division and may rank as the largest corporate 
military group ever assembled, according to the report. Other private security 
companies have sprung up overnight to protect British and American civilians.
   
  Britain is also playing a leading role in advising on the creation of state 
institutions and the business of government. PA Consulting, which has also 
received a contract for advising on the Government's ID cards scheme, worth 
around £19m, is now a key adviser in Iraq.
   
  Adam Smith International, a body closely linked to the right-wing think-tank 
used by Margaret Thatcher, has been heavily involved in the foundation of the 
Iraqi government and continues to influence its newly formed ministries. 
According to the Tory MP Quentin Davies, who visited Iraq, the advisers are 
"reordering Iraqi government operations at the most basic level, to help 
restructure some of the Iraqi ministries, in fact physically restructure them, 
even suggesting how the minister's office should be laid out".
   
  Another favourite of the Thatcher governments, now involved in Iraq, is Tim 
Bell, who ran the Tories' election campaigns in 1979, 1983 and 1987. His PR 
firm Bell-Pottinger has been involved in advising on the 2004 elections and a 
strategic campaign to promote bigger concepts such as the return of 
sovereignty, reconstruction, support for the army and police, minority rights 
and public probity.
   
  Loukas Christodoulou, of Corporate Watch, has been monitoring British 
business relations with Iraq since the invasion. He says in his conclusion to 
our joint report: "The presence of these consultants in Iraq is arguably a part 
of the UK government's policy to push British firms as lead providers of 
privatisation support. The Department for International Development has 
positioned itself as a champion of privatisation in developing countries. The 
central part UK firms are playing in reshaping Iraq's economy and society lays 
the ground for a shift towards a corporate-dominated economy. This will have 
repercussions lasting decades."
   
  In five years, the £1.1bn of contracts identified in the report will be 
dwarfed by what Britain and the US hope to reap from investments. Highly 
lucrative oil contracts have yet to be handed out. 
   
  AB                                                                            
                             [EMAIL PROTECTED]                                  
                                                                    "For to us 
will be their return; then it will be for us to call them to account." (Holy 
Quran 88:25-26)

 
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