U.S. Ambassador Makes Big Impression in Egypt

egypt anti obma signs P1-BM636_LIONDO_G_20130808195519

On the bright side, at least Egyptians know the name of the U.S. Ambassador (Anne Patterson). Maybe if we doubled our foreign aid, they would take down at least one of those signs.

I have been railing against foreign aid since… hell…. since way back when my beard was red. Here’s a 2011 piece I did for Barron’s on how foreign aid corrupts recipient nations. It mentions the Egypt debacle: “The U.S. has provided more than $40 billion in aid to Egypt over the past 30 years—roughly equivalent to the personal fortune possessed by Hosni Mubarak when he was driven from office a few months ago. Regardless of how brazen the Egyptian élite’s thefts became, U.S. taxpayers were still forced to bankroll Mubarak and cronies.”

Barron’s June 4 2011
The Anti-Corruption Charade
by James Bovard

In much of the world, governing is a synonym for looting. Unfortunately, American and European foreign aid has a long history of accelerating the looting. Foreign aid created a generation of kleptocracies—governments of thieves—in Africa in the 1970s and 1980s. Mercedes-Benz automobiles became so popular among African government officials that a new Swahili word was coined: wabenzi—”men of the Mercedes-Benz.”

A 2009 Council on Foreign Relations report noted that “many public officials in Africa seek re-election because holding office gives them access to the state’s coffers, as well as immunity from prosecution.”

Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo, author of the recent book, Dead Aid, wrote: “A constant stream of free money is a perfect way to keep an inefficient or simply bad government in power.” Numerous other studies over the past dozen years showed that countries that receive more foreign aid tend to have higher corruption.

Former President George W. Bush responded by creating the Millennium Challenge Corp. to reward foreign governments for moderating their greed (see “Bribing for Honesty,” Editorial Commentary, Barron’s, Feb. 21, 2005). Bush proudly though incoherently announced: “We won’t be putting money into a society which is not transparent and corrupt.” (He probably meant “corruption-free.”)

But the Millennium Challenge Corp. quickly became another garden-variety foreign-aid program, not posing a real challenge to corruption. Governments such as those of Georgia, Paraguay and Mozambique received MCC windfalls, despite their well-deserved reputations for venality and theft. MCC’s rhetoric didn’t deter the Bush administration from lavishing foreign aid on notorious regimes such as those that ruled Nigeria, Bangladesh, Tajikistan, Indonesia and Kyrgyzstan.

Easy Promises
Afghanistan is the latest exhibit for foreign aid as a political weapon of mass destruction. In a January 2002 speech at Georgetown University, newly designated Afghan ruler Hamid Karzai gave personal assurances that foreign aid his nation received would be properly spent: “We have to promise that we will not cheat our own people. If there is cheating, corruption, I will stop it.”

More than $50 billion of aid poured into Afghanistan in the following years. The flood made Afghan politicians far more rapacious. Economists in the 1990s had dubbed this tendency the “voracity effect,” and, according to Mohammad Yusin Osmani, chief of the Afghan government’s High Office of Oversight, the surge of aid helped intensify corruption throughout the country.

Between 2005 and 2009, Afghanistan’s “corruption rating” went from merely bad to worst in the world (except for Somalia, which doesn’t have a government), according to Transparency International, a highly respected campaigner against corruption. Average Afghans believe that corruption has doubled since 2007, according to a recent survey by an Afghan-based nonprofit, Integrity Watch.

A United Nations study found that most Afghans identified corruption as the nation’s biggest problem. Foreign aid-spurred corruption is turning average Afghans against the Karzai government. Most Afghans in a recent survey declared that the pervasive corruption was helping the Taliban’s revival.

U.S. military officials tout Kandahar as the most important battleground in the Afghan campaign. But the governor of Kandahar denounced his own government officials and police officers as “looters and kidnappers,” according to the Washington Post.

Easy Applause
The Obama administration has responded with huffing, puffing and posturing. In late 2009, President Barack Obama gave Hamid Karzai a six-month deadline to “eradicate corruption,” according Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. After his re-election campaign was caught stealing more than a million votes, Karzai promised, “Fighting corruption will be the key focus of my second term in office.”

In May 2010, President Obama hailed Karzai at a White House ceremony for “the progress that has been made, including strengthening anticorruption efforts.” In June, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder visited Kabul, and proclaimed that “we applaud” President Karzai for his anticorruption actions. Yet Karzai’s complaints led to the scuttling of U.S.-backed anticorruption teams that were nailing tainted Afghan officials.

The popular uprisings against Arab dictators earlier this year are further evidence of the failure of U.S. aid to promote good governance or political decency. The U.S. has provided more than $40 billion in aid to Egypt over the past 30 years—roughly equivalent to the personal fortune possessed by Hosni Mubarak when he was driven from office a few months ago. Regardless of how brazen the Egyptian élite’s thefts became, U.S. taxpayers were still forced to bankroll Mubarak and cronies.

Easy Policies
Foreign aid will continue to be toxic as long as politicians continue to be politicians. Imagine how Americans might react if some foreign entity foisted trillions of dollars of free spending money on the U.S. president and the ruling party in Congress. Yet we are supposed to believe that carpet-bombing a foreign nation with dollars is benevolent.

American leaders are far more concerned with buying influence than with safeguarding purity. Foreign aid is often little more than a bribe for a foreign regime to behave in ways that please the U.S. government. One large bribe naturally spawns hundreds or thousands of smaller bribes, and thereby corrupts an entire country.

There is no bureaucratic cure for the perverse incentives created by flooding foreign nations with U.S. tax dollars. It would be far more honest if American politicians openly admitted that aid corrupts recipient nations, but that such damage is justified when it underpins U.S. foreign policy. Taxpayers suffer enough without also having to endure politicians’ bogus humanitarian boasting.

Tagline: JAMES BOVARD is the author of Attention Deficit Democracy (2006), Lost Rights: The Destruction of American Liberty (1994), and seven other books.
On Twitter – @jimbovard

18 thoughts on “U.S. Ambassador Makes Big Impression in Egypt”

  1. “Imagine how Americans might react if some foreign entity foisted trillions of dollars of free spending money on the U.S. president and the ruling party in Congress.”

    imagine? we see it every election cycle, millions in campaign donations flowing in from…………

  2. Oilee Obama declare war on Mujahedoon regardless of code/location..BBBu$h dronnincc is ON and you can not hide except behind Allah SWT Rahama.

  3. One point you've failed to mention is that U.S. foreign aid is also a very large subsidy for U.S. corporations, with the recipients of U.S. aid being expected to spend this money in contracts with these U.S. crony capitalists.

    1. And this aid is to protect a certain shit*y little state in the region. For all practical reasons, this is actual aid to this state. America pays it to make the Egyptians turn a blind eye on the actions of this state and keep the camp David accords. Bribery but paid by uncle Sap.

  4. Government exists because of power. People run political offices to access to power.
    Power corrupts, absolutely power corrupts absolutely.
    The question remains : how to abolish political power?
    as long as people still believe in statism the problem remains no matter how many elections they attend.
    If the people do not have a will to be responsible to themselves, they will never have freedoms
    Freedom is the WILL to take responsibility for ourselves

  5. What is the difference between how our elected act with overseas monied or political interest and how our monied interest treat them for blatant acts of bribery and malfeasance while in office?
    Money flows so freely for half assed fullfillment of contracts and some 60% of foreign aid stays in US political and corporate pockets.
    Egypts and Israels aid is in military aid as is every damn nation,over 30 we are now killing and invading, in Africa continent alone.
    Then those nations we didript have to neg and borrow and sell at cheap to Uas entitys.
    Grraft by our govrrent overseas is plotted right here within US.

  6. once again

    true journalism such as this elevates the USA, so corrupt host elites know you cant fool all of us. But now the USG is criminalizing independent journalism

    it would be useful to ask NGOs like Oxfam, Reprieve, swiss development corp for an insiders guide on how to control pilferage

  7. There was virtually no legal basis for what the U.S. ended up doing in Libya. There ended up being no net benefit for Libyans or for U.S. interests as defined by Washington. It was a failure and its consequences continue to haunt us.

  8. Ronnie talks about having the sunflower as her patron flower- particular to Mormons. It came with a soft faux-leather case that fits a typical iPod/iPod Touch/Samsung Galaxy 4.0-sized mp3 player fairly well. I am not in any particular line of work where I need it too often, but I thought it would be nice to have. Free Food Journal For Diabetes Find a nautral Doctor. Even the handful of hairs that I do those two or three days later, aren't that noticeable, but I'm a perfectionist like that, haha. Before you buy this product, you might want to call them just to give yourself an idea of how bad the customer service is. Diabetes Pathophysiology Complications Diabetes Arccfn Type 2 Diabetes Australia Statistics read more

  9. ????? ????? ????? ?? ???? ??????? ?? ??? ?????? ??? ?????? ????? ??? ????? ????? ??????? ?????? ????? ?????? ???? ????? ????? ?????? ???? ???? ??? ??????? ????? ????? ?? ?? ?? ???? ??? ????? ???? ???? ?? ?????? ????? ?? ?? ?????? ?????? ???? ?? ??? ??? ????? ????? ????? ???? ???? ????? ????? ????? ????? ?????? ??????? ?????? ??????? ???? ?????? ????? ???? ????? ?????? ?? ???? ???????? ????? ???? ????? ???? ?? ???? ??????? ???? ??? ???? ???? ??? ??? ???? ???? ??? ????? ????? ????? ??????? ???? ?? ???? ????????? ????? ?????? ???? ???????? ??????? ??? ??? ?????? ???? ????? ??? ????? ?? ???? ??????? ????? ????? ?????? ??? ????? ???? ?? ?? ????? ?????? ??? ????? ?? ????? ??? ?? ??? ?? ???? ???? ????? ??? ???? ???? ?????? ????? ???? ????? ?????? ?? ????? ??? ?????? ???? ?? ???? ?????? ?????? ????? ???? ????? ????? ???? ?????? ????? ??? ???????

  10. Word of love and appreciation and greeting fulfillment and private
    Greeting fill all the meanings of brotherhood and friendship
    Greetings from the Heart to Heart
    Thank you with all my heart lkjj

  11. Education is all about enhancing human skills and makes them able to do such work which is for the benefit of themselves, their family and also in some way for the benefit of their country too.

  12. Word of love and appreciation and greeting fulfillment and private
    Greeting fill all the meanings of brotherhood and friendship
    Greetings from the Heart to Heart
    Thank you with all my heart
    GREAT ARTICLE TNX FOR WORK I LOVE THIS
    ????? ????
    and welcom to d great blog for cooking gamesdfr

Comments are closed.