Fonterra contract behind NZ involvement in Iraq

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Mon, 20 Dec 2010 7:54a.m. UPDATED 10:23AM

(NZPA file)

(NZPA file)

Senior Defence Ministry staff told the United States Embassy that former Prime Minister Helen Clark had decided to send soldiers to Iraq to stop Fonterra losing lucrative Oil for Food contracts, WikiLeaks cables reveal.

One of hundreds of leaked diplomatic cables, the information from the US Embassy in Wellington said the identities of the unnamed defence staff should be "strictly protected", after they briefed embassy staff on a Cabinet meeting in which Miss Clark's government did an about turn on sending troops to Iraq, the Dominion Post reported.

"Senior MOD officials (strictly protect) tell us it was not until Finance Minister Michael Cullen pointed out in a subsequent Cabinet meeting that New Zealand's absence from Iraq might cost NZ dairy conglomerate Fonterra the lucrative dairy supply contract it enjoyed under the United Nations Oil for Food program," the cable said.

It said the Prime Minister "found a face-saving compromise" by sending non-combat engineers to be embedded with British forces.

Political scientist Dr Bryce Edwards says while the revelations are interesting, they are no shock.

“I don’t think anyone’s really surprised, this is what everyone’s been talking about but never really had any solid proof of what’s going on behind the scenes – and these Wikileaks give us actual proof.”

He says the cables show the US view the former prime minister very favorably.

Mr Edwards says the most disturbing revelation is the extent to which drug companies “intervened” in New Zealand elections.

Two rotations of 61 engineers spent a year in Basra from September 2003, performing engineering and humanitarian tasks.

Another cable from 2005 said the embassy had no information to indicate any Muslim terrorist cell was operating in New Zealand but that police were monitoring some New Zealand Muslims who may have fought in Afghanistan, Bosnia and possibly Chechnya.

The cable recorded there were about 50,000 Muslims in New Zealand, including 708 Maori converts.

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Comments

03 Feb 2011 06:17p.m.

Ben Vidgen wrote:

The issue of Fonterra and Middle East/NZ politics dates back to Sir Douglas Goodwood (Sanford Fisheries, Amalgmated Dairies (the predecessor to NZ Dairy Board the predecssor inturn to Fonterra), the first kiwi to import goods from Russia, set up shop in Saudi Arabi 1976.

The following year Saudi Arms dealer Adnan Kashoggi arrived in NZ in 1977 startling journos with private plane and leggy blonde.
Kashoggi was here to look for investment opportunities and partners in shipping, wool, timber , meat and dairy. Within a year NZ had opened an embassy in Saudi.

At the time NZ exported less than 4 million to the Entire Middle East by 1980 more than $400 million in dairy was being sold to Iran alone.

And today this is why Fonterra feels the need to employ firms like Security Focus made up of ex NZSAS commandoes. Crown Business is now Big Business and Business is Good!

Ben Vidgen - www.deadline.net.nz

21 Dec 2010 01:35p.m.

nick a wrote:

Blood for dairy purchase...yay go NZ....nice look.

21 Dec 2010 01:33p.m.

nick a wrote:

hahaha @Deane you poor sod this must cut deep into your labour devoted heart...and another one of them turns out to be a american spy/informant...hahaha the irony...many people said the Helen govt was the most corrupt and dodgy lot we have ever had in power and it is now being proved thanks to wikileaks.

20 Dec 2010 04:08p.m.

Deane wrote:

There are a number of issues I have here. One is that we are assuing Wiki leaks is actually true.

Secondly, if it is true then these are non combat solders and no kiwi has died in combat under Clark where a kiwi soilder has died.

So is there really a scandle?

Unlike Key who have now switched our soilders from engineering to combat

Its election year and the media with its paid friend the National party have open season on labour

20 Dec 2010 03:55p.m.

Bruce wrote:

Nothing new here. American soldiers have been dying in their thousands in the middle east to protect the fat cats financial ,oil interest there ,not a good enough reason to send Mothers sons to war,but polititions are good at that as long as they don't have to go, I don't rate any polition they are only any good at looking after themselves to everyone elses detriment

20 Dec 2010 02:18p.m.

R wrote:

OMG, someone told Helen what do to and actually got away with it!

20 Dec 2010 11:57a.m.

Michael wrote:

@ Alex: agreed. National is hardly all sweetness and light, and would have done exactly the same had they been in power at the time. It's very hard to find principled politics nowadays, if such a thing ever existed.

20 Dec 2010 11:17a.m.

Nita wrote:

This just leaves one with a sour taste in one's mouth and a sick feeling in one's stomach and I just sit here shaking my head.

20 Dec 2010 10:47a.m.

Alex wrote:

@Lightseed: No. Both major political parties are awful. Hopefully people start to realise this.

20 Dec 2010 10:13a.m.

John Robb wrote:

Helen Clark like Keith Holyoake and the sending NZ troops to the Vietnam conflict and David Lange over the Rainbow Warrior bombers were all blackmailed by threats to our trade, Clark and Holyoake by the US and Lange by France and since our government won't meet the Dalai Lama in case we offend the Chinese shows that nothing has changed.
While people of different politcal persuasions will feel that NZ leaders they don't like are spineless (which are my feelings about John Key, who should have fessed up initially that he wouldn't meet the Dalai Lama, when he always knew he wouldn't and even Helen Clark wouldn't meet him officially.) in reality in these situations they have little choice if we want to survive as a trading nation.
We are a small Pacific nation and therefore we can expect to be shafted on a regular basis.