When
George W. Bush was first running for governor of Texas,
Washington editor David Corn took a look at Bush family
activities on behalf of Enron in Argentina--itself
now suffering the results of untamed financial markets.
We reprint this November 21, 1994, article to show
how Enron's connections with the Bushes stretch not
just to Washington but around the world.
SEVERAL years ago, says Rodolfo Terragno, a former
Argentine Cabinet Minister, he received a telephone
call from George W. Bush, son of the then-Vice President.
When he hung up, Terragno was annoyed, he recalls,
for the younger Bush had tried to exploit his family
name to pressure Terragno to award a contract worth
hundreds of millions of dollars to Enron, an American
firm close to the Bush clan.
During this past year, as George W. campaigned across
Texas to replace Governor Ann Richards, he portrayed
himself as a successful businessman who relied on
"individual initiative," not his lineage.
Contacted in Buenos Aires, Terragno, now a member
of the Chamber of Deputies, offered an account that
challenges Bush's campaign image.
In 1988, Terragno was the Minister of Public Works
and Services in the government of President Raúl
Alfonsín. He oversaw large industrial projects,
and his government was considering construction of
a pipeline to stretch across Argentina and transport
natural gas to Chile. Several US firms were interested,
including the Houston-based Enron, the largest natural
gas pipeline company in the United States. But Terragno
was upset with the corporation's representatives in
Argentina. They were pressing Terragno for a deal
in which the state-owned gas company would sell Enron
natural gas at an extremely low price, and, he recalls,
they pitched their project with a half-page proposal--one
so insubstantial that Terragno couldn't take it seriously.
Terragno let the Enron agents know he was not happy
with them.
It was then, Terragno says, that he received the unexpected
call from George W. Bush, who introduced himself as
the son of the Vice President. (The elder Bush was
then campaigning for the presidency.) George W., Terragno
maintains, told the minister that he was keen to have
Argentina proceed with the pipeline, especially if
it signed Enron for the deal. "He tried to exert
some influence to get that project for Enron,"
Terragno asserts. "He assumed that the fact he
was the son of the [future] President would exert
influence.... I felt pressured. It was not proper
for him to make that kind of call."
George W. did not detail his relationship with the
pipeline project or with Enron, according to Terragno.
The Argentine did not know that Enron and the Bush
set are cozy. President Bush is an old friend of Kenneth
Lay, Enron head for the past ten years and a major
fundraiser for President Bush. After the 1992 election
left Secretary of State (and Bush pal) James Baker
jobless, he signed as a consultant for Enron. An article
by Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker last year disclosed
that Neil Bush, another presidential son (the one
cited by federal regulators for conflict-of-interest
violations regarding a failed savings and loan), had
attempted to do business with Enron in Kuwait. The
Enron company and the family of its top officers have
donated at least $100,000 to
George W. Bush's gubernatorial campaign. Shortly after
Terragno's conversation with George W., more Bush-related
pressure descended on him, the former minister claims.
Terragno says he was paid a visit by the US Ambassador
to Argentina, Theodore Gildred. A wealthy California
developer appointed ambassador by President Reagan,
Gildred was always pushing Terragno to do business
with US companies. This occasion, Terragno notes,
was slightly different, for Gildred cited George W.
Bush's support for the Enron project as one reason
Terragno should back it.
"It was a subtle, vague message," Terragno
says, "that [doing what George W. Bush wanted]
could help us with our relationship to the United
States." Terragno did not OK the project, and
the Alfonsín administration came to an end
in 1989. Enron was luckier with the next one. The
pipeline was approved by the administration of President
Carlos Saúl Menem, leader of the Peronist Party
and a friend of President
Bush. (The day after Menem was inaugurated, Neil Bush
played a highly publicized game of tennis in Buenos
Aires with Menem.) Argentine legislators complained
that Menem cleared the pipeline project for development
before economic feasibility studies were prepared.
Replying to a list of questions from The Nation asking
whether George W. Bush spoke to Terragno about the
pipeline project and whether he had any business relationship
with Enron, Bush's gubernatorial campaign issued a
terse statement: "The answer to your questions
are no and none. Your questions are apparently addressed
to the wrong person." This blanket denial covered
one question that inquired if George W. Bush had ever
discussed any oil or natural gas projects with any
Argentine official. George W.'s response on this point
is contradicted by a 1989 article in the Argentine
newspaper La Nacion that reported he met that year
with Terragno to discuss oil investments. (The newspaper
noted that this meeting took place in Argentina, but
Terragno says he saw Bush in Texas.)
Theodore Gildred, a private developer again, is traveling
in Argentina; his office says he is unavailable. An
Enron spokesperson comments, "Enron has not had
any business dealings with George W. Bush, and we
don't have any knowledge that he was involved in a
pipeline project in Argentina."
In late August, several members of the Chamber of
Deputies--Terragno not among them--submitted a request
for information, calling on President Menem to answer
dozens of questions about the business activities
of the Bush family in Argentina. (In 1987, Neil Bush
created a subsidiary of his oil company to conduct
business there. In early August, a Buenos Aires newspaper
reported that on a forthcoming trip to Argentina the
former President would lobby the Menem government
to allow a US company to build a casino there. The
onetime President said this was not true.)
One of the deputies' queries was, Does Menem know
whether George W. Bush attempted to capitalize in
Argentina on his father's position? So far Menem has
not responded.
MORE ON ENRON
>>
February 05, 2002.
[Source: The Nation, February 4, 2002]
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