With Henry Kissinger on the CNOOC advisory board and the lobbying/law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld coldly dropping representation of Chevron for CNOOC, I wondered if the Bush* White House would intervene on behalf of China despite the nonpartisan issues with our energy / national security.
Here's another take on the pull out:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20050802-1100-unocal.html- snip -
CNOOC's ownership structure also raised hackles in Congress. The company is part of the China National Offshore Oil Corp., which is 70 percent owned by China's government – an arrangement that helped secure favorable financing terms unavailable to Chevron.
Raising concerns about the financing became a pivotal issue because it made it more difficult for CNOOC to raise its bid without fueling the perception that its offer was being bankrolled by a deep-pocketed government, Gheit said. "They didn't want to put even more fuel on that fire, so it became a tremendously uphill battle for them."
Despite the prickly politics, Unocal's board appeared poised to accept CNOOC's offer until Chevron agreed to sweeten its offer two weeks ago.
CNOOC' board had authorized a bid increase to $69 per share, but the company's chairman, Fu Chengyu, declined unless Unocal agreed to pay the $500 million fee that would have been owed to Chevron if its bid lost out. Unocal refused, and reaffirmed its commitment to Chevron.