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Wolfowitz - bank on a big surprise or two : Comments
By Josh Ushay, published 12/7/2005Josh Ushay argues it is a mistake to put Paul Wolfowitz in with the old guard conservatives like Donal Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney.
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In a previous role as Ambasador to Indonesia, he advocated banking deregulation.
“Pushed by the World Bank, the IMF, and Wolfowitz's Economic Policy Support Office (EPSO) at the U.S. embassy, Indonesia's technocrats opened the floodgate for local crony conglomerates to set up private banks across the country and take in deposits from a trusting public… These policies were a timebomb set in 1988 and finally triggered in 1997 when the Thai baht collapsed. Indonesia's banking system had to be bailed out, the public took on crushing levels of new debt, and the Indonesian population suffered miserably.”
He was quite an admirer of Suharto, once describing his leadership as “strong and remarkable”, but he generally ignored Suharto’s plundering of Indonesia, and also ignored the major human rights abuses taking place.
“Prominent Indonesian activists and leaders of NGOs are already on record stating that when he was ambassador, Wolfowitz never met with them or visited their offices to lend moral support as they struggled for freedom from the repressive Suharto regime.” http://www.etan.org/et2005/march/27/29wolfwitz.htm
Of course Indonesia was a major customer of US arms throughout the Suharto years, and it is quite possible that Australia could not militarily intervene in East Timor during those times, because we would have been fighting an enemy being supplied with weaponry by an ally.
But moving right along to more recent times, he initially briefed George Bush that the Iraq war was “doable”, and would only cost about US $20 Billion. After 100,000 Iraq lives have been lost, together with another 2,000 US soldiers, and over US $300 Billion dollars have been spent, that war does not seem so “doable”, and alternatives should have been followed.
So after a foray into Asia and the Middle East, he is now off to Africa in charge of the World Bank, as if they have not suffered enough already.