http://redpepper.org.uk/KYE/x-kye-Aug2004.htmlAugust 2004
Rifkind is, in fact, an expert at making money from Labour policies. Despite leading the minority of top Tories who opposed the war against Iraq, he is currently cashing in on the occupation of the country. In April he started work as chairman of the Armor Group, whose mercenaries are currently guarding Bechtel staff and British diplomats working in Iraq. Only two years ago Rifkind used the pages of The Spectator to declare: ‘The prospect of an American occupying army having to remain for months, perhaps years, in a country as important as Iraq is profoundly disturbing and would be destabilising.’
Armor director Christopher Beese told the Scottish broadsheet The Herald that the company hired Rifkind because the British government was considering regulating private military firms and the former minister ‘could make the odd contact in terms of getting things done in government’. Beese added: ‘He understands our industry, particularly because of the directorships he already holds with petroleum companies.’
And, truth be told, Rifkind is a director or adviser for three oil-related firms: Ramco Energy, Petrofac and BHP Billiton. Rifkind was hired by Australia-based BHP in 1997, as a ‘door-opener’ to the Middle East. Interesting information about BHP’s activities in Iraq emerged shortly after the ‘liberation’ of Baghdad last year, when the newspaper The Australian published details from documents taken from the burning Iraqi foreign office. It seems that BHP began discussions about working with Iraq’s oil industry in 1996: the firm wanted to be ready to move in if sanctions against the country were lifted, or to work under the UN-regulated oil for food programme.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/politics/story/0,6903,1504646,00.htmlJune 12, 2005
Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the former Tory Foreign Secretary who is now standing for the leadership of the Conservative Party, is at the centre of a controversy involving a secret attempt to discuss oil deals with Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq.
Rifkind's name was discovered on confidential Iraqi diplomatic communiques found in the country's ransacked Foreign Ministry in Baghdad shortly after the fall of Saddam in 2003.
The contents of the papers have been confirmed as genuine and reveal that an Australian oil company which Rifkind was working for tried to open a business relationship with Saddam's government. One paper written in Arabic, with the stamp of the Republic of Iraq's Foreign Ministry, is marked 'confidential'. At the top Rifkind's name is underlined. It discloses that on 11 February 1999 Rifkind's executive assistant at the firm BHP sent a letter to Iraq's ambassador at the UN, Saeed al-Mousawi, offering him a meeting with the former cabinet minister.
http://www.carbonweb.org/showitem.asp?article=166&parent=94 July 2006
Dramatic new evidence has been released of high-level lobbying for Iraqi oil contracts, on behalf of oil companies BHP Billiton and Shell.
Former British Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind – who bid unsuccessfully last year for the leadership of the Conservative Party – promised to push US Vice President Dick Cheney for the oil companies to be granted a contract for one of Iraq’s largest oilfields, just weeks after the Iraq war.
The new information comes at a highly sensitive time, when the USA has stepped up its efforts to influence Iraqi oil policy.