http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-fg-contract15mar15,0,739718,print.story?coll=la-home-headlines

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ

Army Ignored Broker on Arms Deal
U.S. general supervised an Iraq contract that a slain American said
was tangled in kickbacks.

By Ken Silverstein and T. Christian Miller
Times Staff Writers

March 15, 2005

BAGHDAD — Soon after interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi took office
last summer, he announced plans to create a tank division for the new
Iraqi army.

The $283-million project was supposed to display the power of Iraq's
new government. But under the guidance of a task force overseen by one
of America's top generals, it has become another chapter in a
rebuilding process marked by accusations of corruption.

The U.S. contractor working on the project repeatedly warned the task
force headed by Army Lt. Gen. David H. Petraeus that a Lebanese
middleman involved in the deal might be routing kickbacks to Iraqi
Defense Ministry officials. But senior U.S. military officials did not
act on the contractor's pleas for tighter financial controls,
according to documents and interviews.

"If we proceed down the road we are currently on, there will be
serious legal issues that will land us all in jail," the contractor,
Dale Stoffel, wrote in a Nov. 30 e-mail to a senior assistant to Petraeus.

Eight days later, Stoffel was shot dead in an ambush near Baghdad. The
killing is being investigated by the FBI, according to people who have
been interviewed by the bureau.

Since then, senior U.S. military officials have continued to work with
the middleman, Raymond Zayna, who has taken over part of Stoffel's
contract, documents and interviews show.

Although the U.S. military initially insisted that the Iraqi
government was in control of the project, e-mails obtained by The
Times show that Petraeus' task force supervised it.

The case raises concerns about the U.S. commitment to accountability
in projects involving Iraqi money. The inspector general for Iraq's
reconstruction recently criticized the failure of the former U.S.-led
Coalition Provisional Authority to properly account for $8.8 billion
in contracts issued using Iraqi funds.

A $24.7-million payment on the contract that was supposed to go to
Stoffel is unaccounted for.

Through a spokesman, Petraeus declined to be interviewed, referring
inquiries to the Iraqi Defense Ministry. Ministry officials did not
respond to requests for comment.

In January, Capt. Steve Alvarez, a spokesman for Petraeus' task force,
said the arms contract was an "MOD [Ministry of Defense] matter."

"There really isn't much more to our involvement," he said.

Later, after being told about the e-mails indicating that task force
officers were directing work on the contract, Alvarez said that
"performance under this contract was of interest" to U.S. officials.

"Quite naturally, there were contacts and communications between [the
task force] and the parties to the contract in order to coordinate,"
Alvarez said. He added that Petraeus "was never told of any
improprieties."

The weapons deal took shape last year, after Allawi began pressing
U.S. military officials for the formation of a tank brigade.

Although the U.S. did not consider the brigade vital to fighting the
insurgency, Allawi saw it as a politically important demonstration to
Iraqi citizens that the government was reconstituting its armed
forces, an official with the U.S.-led coalition said. The Iraqis
agreed to pay for an entire mechanized division at an estimated cost
of $283 million.

Allawi wanted at least one tank brigade in place before the Jan. 30
national assembly election. The deadline put pressure on the U.S.
military to deliver the tanks quickly.

Petraeus backed Stoffel, a weapons dealer with extensive experience in
the Eastern European equipment used by the Iraqi army, as a man who
could obtain and deliver the goods.

Stoffel had a long history of working with the U.S. government. He
acted on behalf of U.S. intelligence agencies to covertly buy foreign
military equipment for research and testing by the U.S. military,
documents show.

In a letter to Iraqi Defense Minister Hazem Shaalan on July 20, 2004,
Petraeus pledged to "fully support" Stoffel, who proposed to refurbish
Iraq's tanks and personnel carriers and buy new equipment from Eastern
European sources.

On Aug. 16, Stoffel's firm, Wye Oak Technology of Monongahela, Pa.,
signed a "broker's agreement" with the Defense Ministry, giving
Stoffel the exclusive right to buy tanks and other equipment for the
mechanized division on the ministry's behalf.

Stoffel was awarded the contract without competitive bidding. The
contract was structured so that Stoffel was paid a percentage of the
price of goods purchased — an arrangement barred by U.S. law but
allowed in Iraq.

Iraqi Deputy Defense Minister Mashal Sarraf insisted on another
unusual provision, according to sources with knowledge of the
contract: He required that Stoffel conduct all financial transactions
through middleman Zayna.

Sarraf did not respond to requests for comment made through the
Defense Ministry.

In September, Stoffel signed a limited power of attorney allowing
Zayna to "arrange financing and request banking guarantees" for the
contract, records show. Zayna was to act as a broker between Stoffel
and the Defense Ministry, reconciling invoices and disbursing payments.

Another Lebanese businessman, Mohammed abu Darwish, worked with
Zayna's firm, General Investment Group, on the contract and
participated in meetings with task force officials, e-mails and
interviews show. In an unrelated case in September, the Pentagon
barred Darwish from receiving future American contracts because of his
alleged role in a scheme to defraud the U.S. of millions of dollars on
a security contract in Iraq, according to a U.S. Air Force document.

Soon after he started work on the contract, Stoffel began to voice
concerns about Zayna and his relationship with Iraqi defense
officials, according to e-mails and interviews.

In conversations with military officials, Stoffel complained that
Zayna was charging him a 3% fee on financial transactions. He
suspected that a portion of the fee was being kicked back to the
Defense Ministry. Stoffel also said Zayna was trying to force him to
use certain subcontractors that he believed were secretly controlled
by Zayna and Iraqi officials.

Asked for comment, Darwish referred questions to Zayna, saying that
"the deal belongs to him." Efforts to reach Zayna were unsuccessful.

By October, the Defense Ministry had issued Zayna's firm $24.7 million
in payment for the refurbishing work Stoffel had done, the contractor
told military officials.

The money was never delivered to Stoffel, who in October began
complaining to U.S. officials in Washington and Baghdad. He wrote
letters, previously disclosed by The Times, to Sen. Rick Santorum
(R-Pa.) and a senior Pentagon official spelling out his suspicions
about Zayna.

Stoffel also e-mailed U.S. Army Col. David Styles, Petraeus' assistant
on the project. He asked Styles to have Petraeus intervene to stop
millions of dollars being funneled without oversight through Zayna.

"There is no oversight of the money and if/when something goes wrong,
regardless of how clean our hands are, heads will roll and it will be
the heads of those that are reachable, and the people who are suppose
to know better (US citizens, military, etc.)," Stoffel wrote in the
November e-mail to Styles.

Stoffel's concerns were shared by an official with the U.S.-led
coalition in Iraq who worked as an advisor to the Defense Ministry. On
learning of Zayna's role in the contract, this official urged the
ministry to suspend further payments. The official also had concerns
about Stoffel, who had come under scrutiny for previous arms dealings
unrelated to the Iraqi contract.

The official suggested that the Defense Ministry establish a clear
audit trail on the use of the funds. However, the official noted that
Styles was worried that additional accounting measures would cause delays.

Styles said the concern over accounting was "getting in the way," the
official said. "It was a pretty big issue for Petraeus to get it done
and delivered, and he was riding Styles hard."

In one e-mail, Styles referred to Stoffel and business associates as
his "team." The e-mail describes orders to both Stoffel and Zayna on
how to implement the contract, down to such mundane details as fixing
an oil leak and having Zayna buy sets of tools.

Styles pressed Stoffel to draft a progress report for coalition and
Iraqi officials to "get the advisors off our [backs] and ensure the
uninterrupted flow of funds for the project."

Petraeus worked with top Iraqi officials to allow Stoffel access to
bases across the country, according to a letter from Bruska Noori
Shaways, the Defense Ministry's secretary-general.

"With the assistance, cooperation and support of Lt. Gen. David J.
[sic] Petraeus and the U.S. company Wye Oak Technology, the Iraq
Ministry of Defense has instituted and initiated" the program to
create a mechanized division, Shaways wrote in September to Army Gen.
George W. Casey, commander of coalition forces in Iraq.

Task force spokesman Alvarez initially said the U.S. military did not
get involved in the contract dispute. "We were not aware of any U.S.
military working with Wye Oak," Alvarez wrote in January. In response
to follow-up questions from The Times, Alvarez acknowledged that
Petraeus intervened with Iraqi officials after learning of problems
with the contract.

"When told that there was a holdup regarding refurbishment of the
armored vehicles, Lt. Gen. Petraeus did ask the ministry to get on
with whatever they were going to do with the contract so that the
stand-up of the mechanized brigade would not be delayed," Alvarez said.

By late November, Stoffel had returned to the United States to seek
help in getting his payment. He asked Pentagon officials and
Santorum's office to pressure the Iraqis to release the $24.7 million
to him.

Stoffel suggested that an international accounting firm be brought in
to supervise the contract's financial transactions and clear up
questions about the missing money.

He warned of consequences if the money was not recovered.

"News of it will be on the front page under the photos of President
Bush, [Defense Secretary Donald H.] Rumsfeld, me" and Petraeus' task
force, Stoffel wrote to another military officer in early December.
"Jobs will be lost and congressional hearings will be held."

U.S. military officials informed Zayna about the allegations of
corruption, according to several people familiar with the matter.
British Brig. Gen. David Clements summoned the parties to a Dec. 5
meeting in Iraq. Afterward, Clements ordered Zayna to release the
money to Stoffel, sources said.

As of Dec. 8, Stoffel still had not received the money. That day,
after he left the Taji military base outside Baghdad, his SUV was
rammed by another vehicle. Stoffel and a business associate, Joseph
Wemple, were cut down in a hail of bullets.

Another occupant of the vehicle apparently escaped unharmed, leading
to suspicions among the victims' friends that he may have been
involved in the attack.

About a week later, a previously unknown insurgent group, Brigades of
the Islamic Jihad, claimed responsibility.



Since the killing, U.S. military officials have continued working with
Zayna. He is doing construction work on a U.S.-controlled military
base outside Baghdad related to the project, said officials with the
U.S.-led coalition.

Stoffel's firm tried unsuccessfully to keep the contract. Wye Oak
Technology sent a letter to U.S. and Iraqi officials on Jan. 25 saying
it was prepared to resume work so long as "transparency and
accountability" were established.

The U.S. military and Iraqi Defense Ministry have not responded. A Wye
Oak official declined to comment.

Petraeus' task force has also pressed ahead with the creation of the
mechanized division. The first brigade was operational just before the
January election, and some elements of it are guarding Iraqi
government buildings.

Coalition officials met in February with the Defense Ministry to try
to track down the $24.7 million.

So far, they have had no luck accounting for the money.

Miller reported from Baghdad and Silverstein from Washington.






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