Evidence suggests U.S. Bribed President Of Kyrgyzstan

Akaev, agreed to let the Pentagon open an air base in
his country for operations in Afghanistan.

A crooked alliance in the war on terror?
FBI report ties former Kyrgyzstan leader, and U.S.
ally, to organized crime

By Aram Roston
Producer - NBC News Investigative Unit

10/30/06 "MSNBC" -- -- WASHINGTON - An FBI report
obtained by NBC News suggests that the ruling family
of the remote and mountainous Central Asian nation of
Kyrgyzstan oversaw a vast international criminal
network that stretched all the way to a series of
shell companies in the United States.

Still, it was Kyrgyz then-President Askar Akaev’s
alliance with the U.S. government, and his role in the
war on terror, that may raise the most disturbing
questions. Akaev, who was deposed in a revolution last
year, agreed to let the Pentagon open an air base in
his country for operations in Afghanistan.

After that agreement, the U.S. military steered more
than $100 million in sub-contracts to the Akaev
family’s fuel monopoly, according to U.S. contractors
who oversaw the payments and transactions. That
windfall to the Akaev family businesses equaled about
5 percent of Kyrgyzstan’s annual gross national
product, according to the contractors.

After Akaev fled the country, that air base, called
the Manas, or “Ganci” airbase, was at the heart of an
immense diplomatic struggle as relations between the
U.S. and Kyrgyzstan soured. Kyrgyz officials alleged
the U.S. funds going to Akaev’s family should have
been going to the state treasury instead.

This summer, after months of wrangling, the U.S.
finally announced a deal to pay $150 million over the
next year to various Kyrgyz projects, and the Kyrgyz
government has agreed to keep the base open.

The “Ganci” air base has its roots post-9/11. Named
after Peter Ganci, a New York City firefighter who
lost his life in the World Trade Center attacks, the
base hosts tankers and other planes, and operates as a
transfer facility for troops. The United States needs
it because last year the Uzbekistan government closed
the American base in its country.

Even before the base opened, Akaev was a complex
figure, seen alternatively as a reformer and as a
dictator. He became president in 1990, in the former
Soviet Republic, and was reelected in 2000 in a
landslide vote that the State Department said was
“marred by serious irregularities.”

But after 9/11, and after he permitted the air base to
open, he became a close U.S. ally.

‘A brilliant man’
He was invited to the White House and photographed
with President Bush on Sept. 23, 2002. The two leaders
sealed their partnership during the meeting, calling
for transparent open government, democracy, as well as
“reducing corruption, and enhancing the Kyrgyz
Republic's strong record on economic reform.”

Three years later, Akaev’s family was accused of
siphoning massive amounts of money out of Kyrgyzstan.
The FBI report obtained by NBC News says that “an
international law enforcement investigation is
underway targeting as many as 175 entities associated
with the Akaev organization.” The report cites
allegations of a “vast amount of potential criminal
activities.” The trail, according to the FBI, even led
to the U.S., where the Akaev family was connected to
one American “known to have formed over 6,000 U.S.
shell companies for organized crime factions, weapons
and drug traffickers and cyber criminals.”

American attorney Scott Horton was in Kyrgyzstan
during the base negotiations, and knew Akaev.

“He was an academic, a brilliant man,” says Horton.
“But we began to see a dark side about Askar Akaev. He
and his family and his extended clan mates decided to
take advantage of their position of power for personal
financial gain.”

Dollar figures
Noted economist Anders Aslund knew President Akaev
personally, and prepared annual economic reviews of
Kyrgyzstan for the United Nations Development Program.
He says the scale of corruption by Akaev’s family was
massive.

“One can say that half a billion to $1 billion was
probably what the family amassed," says Aslund.

But if the family businesses were making money off the
state, they truly encountered a bonanza when the U.S.
air base opened in 2002, according to sources involved
in Kyrgyzstan and the negotiations, and records
obtained by NBC News.

Fuel subcontracts draw attention
Two companies owned by the president’s relatives
received $120 million in military fuel subcontracts,
according to the prime contractor. The two companies
were Aalam Services, which was controlled by President
Akaev 's son-in-law, according to the FBI records, and
Manas International, which was widely known to belong
to Akaev's son, Aider Akaev.

“Tens of millions of dollars were paid by our Pentagon
into businesses that were controlled by the President
of Kyrgyzstan and his family,” says Horton.

Aslund says ownership of Manas and Aalam was common
knowledge. Neither company could be reached for
comment.

The first contractor that the Pentagon hired to
provide fuel in Kyrgyzstan says it notified military
officials of the link between the president's family
and Aalam and Manas.

Later, in 2002, when the Pentagon had a competitive
bidding selection to choose a new contractor, a
company named Red Star Enterprises won. It received a
total of more than $240 million over the next several
years, and tells NBC News it paid $120 million to the
two firms.

In an e-mail to NBC News, a company official said:
“These companies were used because DESC [the defense
agency handling fuel contracts] directed all bidders
to use them since they were the only registered
companies to provide services.”

‘Tulip Revolution’
In March 2005, Akaev was ousted from power in an
uprising now known as the “Tulip Revolution.” And that
is when all the alleged corruption started to unravel.
The new Kyrgyz government argued that the state
treasury received little if any direct benefit from
U.S. funds. A Pentagon spokesman says that the U.S.
paid a yearly total of $2.7 million in fees at the
airport.

The Pentagon says any corruption was not its fault.

“We are aware of the allegations of the current Kyrgyz
government,” said Lt. Col. Joe Carpenter in a
statement to NBC News referring to the allegations,
“that former Kyrgyz regime leadership may have
misappropriated funds from U.S. payments for goods or
services,” and added any “misappropriation of funds is
an internal Kyrgyz matter. All DoD contracts for goods
and services in Kyrgyzstan were negotiated in
accordance with U.S. laws and DoD contracting
regulations.”

The Pentagon says it is helping the Kyrgyz government
investigate, by providing U.S. documents.

The Kyrgyz could use the help, because in a strange
twist, there were several U.S. connections to both
Manas and Aalam. Both firms had bank accounts in the
U.S., according to the FBI, and the banks reported
that “Manas and Aalam are tied to transactions with
arms traffickers, Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs)
and a myriad of suspicious U.S. shell companies
associated with the Akaev Organization.”

The FBI refused to confirm whether there is an ongoing
investigation into the Akaev matter, citing a policy
of not confirming or denying investigations.

Akaev is living in Moscow, and refused to comment for
this story, or answer questions. Asked for comment,
Galina Scripkina, who identified herself as Akaev's
attorney, said she could not answer questions
concerning him.

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