What's new

Wikileaks: US monitors 'aggressive' China in Africa

Yeti

BANNED
Nov 26, 2010
7,400
-7
4,514
Country
India
Location
Thailand
The US is closely monitoring China's expanding role in Africa, the latest secret US diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks reveal.

A cable from February quotes a senior US official in Nigeria's main city, Lagos, describing China as "aggressive and pernicious".

US diplomatic cables from Africa also reveal claims by oil giant Shell that it infiltrated Nigerian ministries.

Wikileaks has so far released more than 1,100 of 251,000 secret US cables.

The BBC's diplomatic correspondent says the latest documents provide a fascinating insight into Washington's rivalry with Beijing in Africa.

The cable, published by the Guardian newspaper, quotes Johnnie Carson, US Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, who had been meeting oil company representatives in Lagos.

He describes China as "a very aggressive and pernicious economic competitor with no morals".

"China is not in Africa for altruistic reasons," he says. "China is in Africa primarily for China."

He adds: "A secondary reason for China's presence is to secure votes in the United Nations from African countries."

He argues that China is not seen in Washington as a military or security threat at the moment. But he says there are, what he calls "tripwires" in Africa for the US when it comes to China.

"Have they signed military base agreements? Are they training armies? Have they developed intelligence operations? Once these areas start developing then the US will start worrying," he says.

"The United States will continue to push democracy and capitalism while Chinese authoritarian capitalism is politically challenging. The Chinese are dealing with the [Zimbabwean president] Mugabe's and [Sudanese president] Bashir's of the world, which is a contrarian political model."

'Bribes'

Another US cable talks about China's military and intelligence support for the government of Kenya.

A Chinese enterprise is said to have won a contract to supply telephone monitoring equipment to Kenya after bribes were paid while on a trip to China.

The name of the individual concerned has been edited out.

BBC diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus says the cable provides a case study of China's role in Africa.

Its influence in Kenya is said to have grown rapidly, with Chinese involvement in a host of infrastructure projects as well as collaboration with Kenya's National Security and Intelligence Service.

'Secondments'

The secret cables also say that Shell's top executive in Nigeria at the time, Ann Pickard, told US diplomats that the oil company had good access to government information.

A cable dated 20 October 2009 outlines a conversation Ms Pickard had with the then US ambassador to Nigeria, Robin Renee Sanders.

When Ms Sanders asked the Shell executive about Chinese business interests in Nigeria, Ms Pickard told her that she knew that Nigerian officials had found Chinese offers not good enough.

"She said the (government of Nigeria) had forgotten that Shell had seconded people to all the relevant ministries and that Shell consequently had access to everything that was being done in those ministries," Ms Sanders reported.

The dispatches also show that Shell exchanged intelligence with the US about militant activity in the oil-rich Niger Delta.

Wikileaks says it intends to release all the secret US cables in its possession, although it could take months to do so.

The move has been strongly condemned by the US and other countries.


BBC News - Wikileaks: US monitors 'aggressive' China in Africa
 
lol china has no morals while the later half describes how shell has taken control of the Nigeria government talk about the pot calling the kettle black
 
lol china has no morals while the later half describes how shell has taken control of the Nigeria government talk about the pot calling the kettle black

Nigeria files bribery charges against Dick Cheney news

dick_cheney_domain-b.jpg


The Nigerian government has filed charges against former US vice president Dick Cheney, who was the head of the US oil services firm Halliburton Inc, and eight others in an alleged bribery scandal related to a liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in Nigeria.

The country's anti-corruption agency Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) filed 16 charges of corruption against Dick Cheney, Halliburton Inc, Halliburton Nigeria Limited, Kellogg Brown and Root Inc (KBR), former KBR CEO Albert Stanley, KBR CEO William Utt, Halliburton CEO David Lesar, TSKJ Nigeria Limited, and TSKJ Consortium at the high court in Abuja.

The suspects allegedly paid $132 million to Nigerian government officials through agents Jeffrey Tesler, Wojcieh Chodan, and Tri-Star Investment Ltd to secure lucrative $6-billion worth engineering, procurement, and commissioning (EPC) contracts for the LNG project in Bonny island in Nigeria.

The offence is committed under section 96(1) of the Nigerian Penal Code, and punishable under section 118.

Charges say that sometimes between 1994 and 2005 the suspects conspired with Snamprogetti Netherlands BV, French engineering services company Technip SA, and Japan Gasoline Corp to commit the criminal offence.

In an ongoing US investigation of the case by the Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), in June, Technip SA agreed to pay $240 million criminal penalty to resolve charges related to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) for its participation in the bribing scandal to obtain the EPC contracts for the LNG project

Technip also agreed to pay $98 million in surrender of profits related to the violations.

The US investigations revealed that Technip, KBR and two other companies were part of a consortium that was awarded four EPC contracts between 1995 and 2004 to build LNG facilities on Bonny Island by Nigeria LNG Ltd, a company, whose largest shareholder was the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.

Technip authorized the joint venture to hire agents Jeffrey Tesler and a Japanese trading company, to pay bribes to Nigerian government officials to assist the joint venture in obtaining EPC contracts.

It was further exposed that the joint venture paid around $132 million to Tesler's Gibraltar Corp and $50 million to the Japanese trading company for bribing the government officials.

Last year KBR and Halliburton had agreed to pay $579 million settlement in the US after guilty plea over the $180 million Nigerian bribery charges.

The DoJ said that up to June, a total of $917 million in criminal and civil penalties have been obtained as a result of the ongoing investigations of the case.

Dick Cheney's attorney Terrence O'Connell had earlier denied the charges against his client saying: ''This matter involves the activities of an international four-company joint venture well over a decade ago. The DoJ and the SEC investigated that joint venture extensively and found no suggestion of any impropriety by Dick Cheney in his role of CEO of Halliburton."

It is believed that notwithstanding the US investigation, the Nigerian authorities want to probe the case further from their perspective.
 
He describes China as "a very aggressive and pernicious economic competitor with no morals".

There is the problem. China in its dealings with other counties is amoral.

They do not take into account the moral or imoral action of those they deal with, they pay who they need for the goods they want, much as you or I would buy from the local grocer with out interogating him as to wether or not he beats his wife.

The Chinese call this a policy of non-interference and regard it as the correct thing to do.

Thw "west" think everyone should be like them if you are not you need to be ignored or punished till you see the error of your ways. Anyone that doesnt think like this deals with the devil and becomes tainted by association.

Personaly i think dealing with pigs like mugabe is abhorent but then i have the luxury of not being responsible for running a country with a billion people.

Many people in India and Pakistan would feel that the old western attitude of well if we can just make them more british they would almost be civilised highly offensive.

Only history will show which method does the most good for the most people in the long run.
 
There is the problem. China in its dealings with other counties is amoral.

They do not take into account the moral or imoral action of those they deal with, they pay who they need for the goods they want, much as you or I would buy from the local grocer with out interogating him as to wether or not he beats his wife.

The Chinese call this a policy of non-interference and regard it as the correct thing to do.

Thw "west" think everyone should be like them if you are not you need to be ignored or punished till you see the error of your ways. Anyone that doesnt think like this deals with the devil and becomes tainted by association.

Personaly i think dealing with pigs like mugabe is abhorent but then i have the luxury of not being responsible for running a country with a billion people.

Many people in India and Pakistan would feel that the old western attitude of well if we can just make them more british they would almost be civilised highly offensive.

Only history will show which method does the most good for the most people in the long run.

Great post. I think yours is the better way of looking at China's business dealings. You can say that China deals with unsavory characters in struggling countries and you'd right but then if you say China deals with successful western liberal democracies like Austrialia, Canada and New Zealand, you'd also be right.

I am reminded of a story that someone from South Africa told. He said during Apartheid, he lived in a closed white community and one of the first Chinese people he ever saw was a Chinese merchant who made weekly stops to sell products. Where white merchants deemed it beneath them to sell to blacks, this Chinese merchant sold to whites and the black servants (who were allowed to live in part of the closed community).
 
I remember a statemnet by Hilary where she acknowledges that African has been ignored by the US policy makers. But not anymore................
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom