How Washington extracts billions from foreign companies with overreaching court cases
By: Rachel Marsden
The US has fined a French company for financing “terrorists,” but when Washington does it, they’re called “freedom fighters”
The US government is outraged that the French cement giant, Lafarge, has
admitted to wheeling and dealing with terrorists in a war zone, paying $6
million to Al-Qaeda and Al-Nusra jihadists in Syria. Nothing that a fine of
nearly $800 million leveled against it by Washington can’t fix, apparently. But
why is the US never held accountable for similar schemes?
Lafarge’s factory between Aleppo and the Turkish border had just opened in the
year prior to the conflict in Syria popping off in 2011 – yet another Western
proxy war in an energy-strategic state. Western-backed “Syrian rebels”
ultimately failed to oust President Bashar Assad, all while jihadist groups
flooded the zone to exploit the chaos. So how does a company keep operating in
an active war zone? By paying off jihadist groups on the battlefield where it’s
trying to run a business, apparently. Lafarge, which merged with the Swiss
multinational Holcim Group in 2015, just pleaded guilty in the US earlier this
week to what’s characterized as a sort of employee and executive protection
scheme, agreeing to pay a fine of $777.8 million to the US Treasury, marking the
first time a company has been convicted in the US of backing terrorists.
“In the midst of a civil war, Lafarge made the unthinkable choice to put money
into the hands of ISIS, one of the world’s most barbaric terrorist
organizations, so that it could continue selling cement,” said US Attorney Breon
Peace for the Eastern District of New York in a statement. “Lafarge did this not
merely in exchange for permission to operate its cement plant – which would have
been bad enough – but also to leverage its relationship with ISIS for economic
advantage, seeking ISIS’ assistance to hurt Lafarge’s competition in exchange
for a cut of Lafarge’s sales.”
So in return for France cheating on the global playing field, the US government
leveraged its power through its Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) to deliver
a competitive blow of its own. Lafarge is also under indictment in France, but
what’s a French company doing on trial in a US court? Well, the US – unlike
other countries – has a history of actively seeking to use its justice system as
a blunt instrument against foreign competitors – which it can do as long as a
foreign company is involved in any way with Wall Street, or the US dollar, or
even an American server.
French companies have been targeted multiple times by the US DOJ, but some
top-level French executives admit privately that you have to be pretty naive to
think that this sort of practice is rare or limited to France. They also feel
that targeting by the US Justice Department is highly selective. It’s not hard
to understand why. Executives of French multinational Alstom, for example, were
accused by the US of corruption, threatened with prison sentences of up to 15
years, and the end result that squared everything away was the payment of $772
million in criminal penalties to the US government and the sale of France’s
industrial crown jewel – Alstom’s nuclear power know-how – to Pentagon
contractor, General Electric. British company Amersham was acquired by GE as it
contended with charges of kickbacks to Iraq in order to obtain contracts under
the UN Oil for Food Program. France’s Societe Generale bank paid $585 million in
2018 to settle what the DOJ called a “multi-year bribe scheme in Libya.” And
French energy giant, Total, paid nearly $400 million in fines to US coffers in
2013 to settle charges related to business activities in heavily sanctioned
Iran.
The Swedish telecom company, Ericsson, paid $1 billion to the DOJ in 2019 to
avoid prosecution for an alleged 17 years’ worth of corruption spanning between
2000 and 2016 from China to East Africa. Last year, it was accused of a breach
during its three-year US court-mandated “compliance monitoring” period of
greater transparency into the major US global competitor.
It’s not like Washington doesn’t also support jihadists, er, “freedom
fighters,” in war zones around the world from Latin America into Africa and the
Middle East – and even specifically in Syria. The Western press has pointed out
that the Western-backed Syrian opposition ultimately merged with Al-Qaeda. And
who paid to train and equip these “moderate Syrian rebels,” at least some of
which ended up as Al-Qaeda recruits? The same Uncle Sam – via the CIA and the
Pentagon – who vowed to hunt down terrorists after holding Al-Qaeda directly
responsible for the attacks on US soil on September 11, 2001. We’re talking
billions of US taxpayer dollars that ultimately ended up training jihadists. And
no one’s taking good old Uncle Sam to court over that. And before anyone argues
that a government intelligence operation is different from corporate actions, a
French military intelligence document obtained by the country’s press last year
noted that the spy agency was aware from 2014 of Lafarge’s payments to jihadists.
So the French and American methods may be different, but the end result is the
same. But it’s amusing to witness Washington publicly clutching its pearls as it
extracts hundreds of millions of dollars from a competitor to cushion its
fainting spell from its delicate moral sensibilities being so deeply offended.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN